Praise of Vṛṣotsarga (Bull-release), Worthy Dāna, and the Procedure for Kṣayāha & Ūrdhva-daihika Rites
वृषोत्सर्गदानधर्मपुत्रादिप्रशंसनं नाम त्रयोदशो ऽध्यायः गरुड उवाच / आर्तेन म्रियमाणेन यद्दत्तं तत्फलं वद / स्वस्थावस्थेन दत्तेन विधिहीनेन वा विभो
vṛṣotsargadānadharmaputrādipraśaṃsanaṃ nāma trayodaśo 'dhyāyaḥ garuḍa uvāca / ārtena mriyamāṇena yaddattaṃ tatphalaṃ vada / svasthāvasthena dattena vidhihīnena vā vibho
This is the thirteenth chapter, called “Praise of the merit of releasing a bull (vṛṣotsarga), of dharma, and of dutiful sons and the like.” Garuḍa said: O Lord, tell me the fruit of a gift made by one who is afflicted and dying, and also of a gift made while one is healthy—or even when it is given without the proper ritual procedure, O Mighty One.
Garuda (Vinata-putra)
Concept: Merit of dāna varies by giver’s condition (healthy/sick/dying) and by adherence to vidhi; inquiry frames the hierarchy of intention, capacity, and ritual purity.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-yoga orientation: intention (bhāva), timing, and right means (vidhi) shape karmaphala; dharma as support for purification (citta-śuddhi).
Application: Give regularly while healthy; learn basic dāna-vidhi; when emergencies arise, still give with sincerity, but do not neglect proper procedure when possible.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.14 (chapter on vṛṣotsarga, dāna, dharma-putra praise); Garuda Purana: śrāddha and dāna sections that grade gifts by time, place, recipient, and faith
This verse frames a key inquiry: even gifts made while dying or distressed have a spiritual “fruit” (phala), so the text treats end-of-life charity as a meaningful karmic act worth understanding precisely.
Indirectly: by asking about the merit of last-moment giving, it signals that actions near death influence post-death outcomes, a central theme of the Preta Kanda’s discussion of rites, merit, and the soul’s transitional state.
Give charity intentionally—both in health and in crisis—and focus on sincere, dharmic giving; even if perfect ritual details are missing, the Garuda Purana treats the ethical act and its karmic consequence as significant.