शकुनि (हिरण्मय-पक्षी) उपदेशः — Vighasāśin and the Difficulty of Gārhasthya
देववंशान् ब्रह्म॒वंशान् पितृवंशांश्व शाश्वतान् | संविभज्य गुरोश्चर्या तद् वै दुष्करमुच्यते
arjuna uvāca | devavaṁśān brahmavaṁśān pitṛvaṁśāṁś ca śāśvatān | saṁvibhajya guroś caryā tad vai duṣkaram ucyate ||
Arjuna said: Having duly apportioned their respective shares to the divine lineages, to the Brahman-seer lineages, and to the eternal ancestors—and then serving one’s teacher—this, indeed, is called a difficult discipline. The verse frames true religious life as a balanced ethic: ritual duty to gods, study and transmission of sacred knowledge to the seers, ancestral obligation through śrāddha, and humble personal service to the guru.
अजुन उवाच
Dharma is presented as a fourfold balance: offerings to the gods (yajña/homa), sacred study and preservation of the seer-tradition (svādhyāya), ancestral obligation through śrāddha, and humble service to the guru. Fulfilling all without neglect is called a ‘difficult vow’ because it demands sustained discipline and gratitude across all sources of support—divine, intellectual, familial, and pedagogical.
In the Śānti Parva’s instruction on righteous conduct, Arjuna speaks to highlight how demanding true religious and ethical life is: one must not merely perform isolated rites, but properly ‘apportion’ duties to each rightful recipient and then live in disciplined service to one’s teacher.