Dharma-ākhyāna (Discourse on Dharma): Worthy Charity, Fruitless Gifts, and the Merit of Building Ponds
परदाररतस्यापि परद्रव्याभिलिषिणः । नक्षत्रसूचकस्यापि दत्तं भवति निष्फलम् ॥ ५ ॥
paradāraratasyāpi paradravyābhiliṣiṇaḥ | nakṣatrasūcakasyāpi dattaṃ bhavati niṣphalam || 5 ||
পৰস্ত্ৰীসক্ত, পৰধনলোভী আৰু কেৱল নক্ষত্ৰ দেখুৱাই কোৱা (ধৰ্মহীন জ্যোতিষী) ক দিয়া দান নিষ্ফল হয়।
Narada
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta (peace)
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa (disgust)
It teaches that charity is not only about the act of giving but also about the moral worthiness of the recipient; gifts offered to those rooted in lust, greed, or unethical practices fail to yield spiritual merit.
Bhakti is supported by purity and right conduct; the verse implies that offerings meant for dharma should not empower adharma, because devotion matures when giving aligns with ethical living.
It references Jyotiṣa (Vedāṅga astrology) via “nakṣatra-sūcaka,” warning that technical skill—like star-calculation—without dharmic character is spiritually unproductive in the context of receiving religious gifts.