Varṇāśrama-ācāra and Vikarma: Yudhiṣṭhira’s Inquiry on Safe Dharmas (शिवधर्मप्रश्नः)
चरितव्रद्वाचर्यस्य ब्राह्मणस्य विशाम्पते । भैक्षचर्यास्वधीकार: प्रशस्त इह मोक्षिण:,प्रजानाथ! जिसने ब्रह्मचर्यका पालन किया है, उस ब्रह्मचारी ब्राह्मणके मनमें यदि मोक्षकी अभिलाषा जाग उठे तो उसे ब्रह्मचर्य-आश्रमसे ही संन्यास ग्रहण करनेका उत्तम अधिकार प्राप्त हो जाता है
caritavratācāryasya brāhmaṇasya viśāmpate | bhaikṣacaryāsv adhikāraḥ praśasta iha mokṣiṇaḥ ||
Bhīṣma said: “O lord of the people, for a brāhmaṇa who has lived in disciplined vows and maintained the conduct of brahmacarya, if the longing for liberation arises, then in this very life the right to live by alms as a renunciant is praised as proper. In other words, one who has preserved celibate discipline may, from the brahmacarya stage itself, rightly take up the mendicant path aimed at moksha.”
भीष्म उवाच
A Brahmin who has faithfully maintained brahmacarya and disciplined vows is considered fully eligible, if motivated by liberation, to adopt the mendicant (bhaikṣa) life of renunciation—even directly from the brahmacarya stage—because such renunciation is praised as dharmically proper for a moksha-seeker.
In the Shanti Parva’s instruction on dharma, Bhishma addresses the king (Yudhishthira) and explains norms of life-stages and renunciation, stating that a disciplined brahmacārin Brahmin who turns toward moksha may rightly take up the alms-dependent renunciant path.