Āvāhāryaka-Śrāddha: Qualifications of Recipients, Paṅkti-Pāvana, and Exclusions
कुलीनाः श्रुतवन्तश्च शीलवन्तस्तपस्विनः / अग्निचित्स्नातका विप्रा विज्ञेयाः पङ्क्तिपावनाः
kulīnāḥ śrutavantaśca śīlavantastapasvinaḥ / agnicitsnātakā viprā vijñeyāḥ paṅktipāvanāḥ
البراهمة ذوو النسب الكريم، العارفون بالشُّروتي، أصحاب السلوك الحسن والزاهدون في التَّبَس (التقشّف)—ولا سيّما من أتمّوا أَغْنِچايَنَة (Agnicayana) ومن أكملوا نذر السْناتَكَة (Snātaka)—يُعرَفون بأنهم «مطهِّرو صفّ المائدة» (paṅkti-pāvana).
Narratorial/Smriti-style instruction within the Kurma Purana (Dharma teaching context; traditionally presented through the Purana’s sage-to-sage narration)
Primary Rasa: shanta
This verse is primarily dharma-oriented: it defines outward qualifications (learning, conduct, tapas, and Vedic rites) that make a person socially and ritually ‘purifying’ in communal contexts; it does not directly expound Atman metaphysics.
The verse highlights tapas (austerity/discipline) as a yogic-dharmic quality; rather than meditation techniques, it emphasizes ethical restraint and vow-completion (snātaka) as forms of disciplined living aligned with śāstra.
It does not explicitly discuss Shiva–Vishnu unity; instead, it reflects the Purana’s broader synthesis by grounding spiritual authority in both inner discipline (tapas/śīla) and orthodox Vedic observance (agnicayana, snātaka), a shared sacred framework across Shaiva and Vaishnava milieus.