Dāna–Tapaḥ Praśaṃsā and Gṛhastha-Upadeśa
Maitreya
धर्मलोपभयं ते स्यात् तस्माद् धर्म चरोत्तमम् | धर्मज्ञ! मनुष्य जैसा पाप करता है
dharmalopabhayaṃ te syāt tasmād dharma carottamam | dharmajña! manuṣya yathā pāpaṃ karoti, tadanusāreṇaiva tasya phalaṃ bhoktavyaṃ bhavati | ataḥ bhūtapūrva kīṭa! adhunā tvaṃ mṛtyubhayena kathaṃcid api vyathito mā bhūḥ | hā, te dharmalopasya bhayam avaśyaṃ bhavitavyam, tasmād uttama-dharmam ācaran tiṣṭha ||
Vyāsa said: “Let your fear be only of the loss of dharma; therefore, practice the highest dharma. O knower of dharma, a person must experience results in accordance with the sin he commits. Hence, O one who was formerly a worm, do not be distressed in any way by fear of death. Rather, you should indeed fear the decline of dharma—so continue to live by the best and noblest conduct.”
व्यास उवाच
One should not be ruled by fear of death; the proper fear is the fear of losing dharma. Since actions inevitably yield corresponding results, the wise response is to uphold the highest righteous conduct rather than panic about mortality.
Vyāsa addresses a listener described as having once been a ‘worm’ (kīṭa), reassuring him not to be distressed by death. He frames the situation through karmic causality—sins bring matching consequences—and urges steadfast adherence to dharma as the true safeguard.