परिव्राजक-आचारः (Conduct of the Wandering Renunciant) — Mahābhārata, Śānti-parva 269
तस्मिन् विधौ स्थितानां हि प्रायश्षित्तं न विद्यते । दुर्बलात्मन उत्पन्न प्रायश्षित्तमिति श्रुति:
tasmin vidhau sthitānāṃ hi prāyaścittaṃ na vidyate | durbalātman utpannaṃ prāyaścittam iti śrutiḥ ||
কপিল ক’লে—সেই বিধানত স্থিত থকা লোকৰ বাবে প্ৰায়শ্চিত্ত নাই। প্ৰায়শ্চিত্ত দুঃৰ্বলচিত্তৰ পৰাই উদ্ভৱ হয় বুলি শ্ৰুতিত কোৱা হয়; কিয়নো পাপ তেওঁলোকৰ পৰাই জন্মে, সেয়ে তেওঁলোকৰ বাবেই প্ৰায়শ্চিত্ত বিধান নিৰ্দিষ্ট।
कपिल उवाच
Kapila teaches that expiation (prāyaścitta) is a remedial rule meant for those who lapse due to inner weakness; one who is firmly established in the right discipline and purity does not generate the kind of fault that requires atonement.
In the Śānti Parva’s instruction on dharma and liberation-oriented discipline, Kapila is explaining the logic of moral failure and penance: wrongdoing is linked to weakness of mind, and therefore the tradition prescribes prāyaścitta as a corrective for such persons, not as a necessity for the steadfast.