भरतचरितम्—मृगासक्ति-हेतुकः समाधिभङ्गः, जातिस्मरत्वं, रहूगण-जाḍभरत-संवादः
सुखदुःखोपभोगौ तु तौ देहाद्युपपादकौ धर्माधर्मोद्भवौ भोक्तुं जन्तुर् देहादिम् ऋच्छति
sukhaduḥkhopabhogau tu tau dehādyupapādakau dharmādharmodbhavau bhoktuṃ jantur dehādim ṛcchati
সুখ-দুখৰ ভোগেই দেহ আদি উৎপত্তিৰ কাৰণ; ধৰ্ম-অধৰ্মৰ পৰা জন্মা এই ফল ভোগ কৰিবলৈ জীৱে দেহ আৰু অন্যান্য উপাধি লাভ কৰে।
Sage Parāśara (teaching Maitreya)
Concept: Pleasure and pain are the fruition of dharma and adharma, and embodiment arises as the necessary instrument for experiencing those karmic results.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma
Application: Choose actions with long-term karmic clarity; practice restraint and compassion to reduce adharma-driven suffering and cultivate sattvic outcomes.
Vishishtadvaita: Karma operates within a divinely ordered moral cosmos: the jīva reaps real fruits, yet the system is sustained and regulated by the supreme Lord as inner ruler and dispenser of results.
Vishnu Form: Para-Brahman
Bhakti Type: shanta
Antaryamin: Yes
Jagat Karana: Yes
This verse frames pleasure and pain as karmic outcomes that necessitate embodiment—one receives a body so that dharma and adharma can bear experiential fruit.
Parāśara explains birth as functional: the living being attains a body and its faculties specifically to undergo (bhoktum) the results produced by merit and demerit.
By highlighting samsaric causality (karma → embodiment → experience), the text implicitly points to Vishnu as the Supreme refuge whose grace and devotion enable transcendence beyond dharma-adharma’s binding results.