Vṛṣotsarga (Bull-Release Gift): Procedure, Merit, and Narratives on Dharma, Karma, and Liberation
वृषयज्ञमपश्यन्तो ये चासूयां प्रकुर्वते / सर्वं निवेदितं राज्ञश्चरितं पूर्वजन्मनः
vṛṣayajñamapaśyanto ye cāsūyāṃ prakurvate / sarvaṃ niveditaṃ rājñaścaritaṃ pūrvajanmanaḥ
Wer das heilige Vṛṣa-yajña nicht schaut (oder nicht annimmt) und sich dem Neid hingibt—über solche Menschen wird König Yama von allem unterrichtet: vom gesamten Verzeichnis ihres Tuns aus früheren Geburten.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda)
Afterlife Stage: Yamaloka Journey
Concept: Envy and contempt toward dharmic yajña lead to accountability; karmic records span multiple births and are fully disclosed to Yama.
Vedantic Theme: Ṛta/karma-niyama: an impersonal moral order where nothing is lost; saṃskāras and actions bear inevitable fruit.
Application: Curb envy toward others’ dharmic acts; cultivate anumodanā (rejoicing in others’ merit) and respectful openness to sacred practices.
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: raudra
Type: court/assembly
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Pretakalpa: Yama’s judgment, record of deeds (general internal parallel)
This verse treats envy as a serious moral fault that marks a person for scrutiny, because it reflects inner adharma; such tendencies become part of the karmic record presented to Yama.
It states that Yama is informed of the soul’s complete conduct across previous births, implying that post-death judgment is grounded in cumulative karma rather than only the last lifetime.
Cultivate non-envious speech and conduct, and support righteous acts/rituals with respect—since attitudes like envy and rejection of dharmic practice are portrayed as karmically consequential.