HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 175Shloka 41
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Shloka 41

Matsya Purana — War of Devas and Asuras; Birth of Aurva Fire; Countering Tamasī Māyā through ...

अयोगे केशधरणम् असंकल्पव्रतक्रियां अब्रह्मचर्ये चर्या च त्रयं स्याद् दम्भसंज्ञकम् //

ayoge keśadharaṇam asaṃkalpavratakriyāṃ abrahmacarye caryā ca trayaṃ syād dambhasaṃjñakam //

Keeping matted hair without true discipline, performing vows and rites without a sincere resolve, and maintaining an outward show of religious conduct while lacking brahmacarya—these three are called ‘dambha’ (hypocritical piety).

ayogein the absence of true yoga/fitness/inner discipline
ayoge:
keśa-dharaṇamwearing/keeping the hair (e.g., matted locks) as a mark
keśa-dharaṇam:
asaṅkalpawithout a genuine intention/resolve
asaṅkalpa:
vrata-kriyāmvow-practices and ritual acts
vrata-kriyām:
abrahmacaryewhen celibacy/self-restraint is absent
abrahmacarye:
caryāconduct/observance (often religious behavior)
caryā:
caand
ca:
trayamthe three
trayam:
syātis/should be
syāt:
dambha-saṃjñakamtermed/known as hypocrisy (dambha).
dambha-saṃjñakam:
Lord Matsya (in instruction to Vaivasvata Manu, on dharma and the signs of hypocrisy)
MatsyaManuBrahmacaryaVrataSaṅkalpa
DharmaAsceticismVrataBrahmacaryaEthics

FAQs

This verse is not about pralaya; it is an ethical teaching defining dambha—false religiosity based on external signs and insincere practice.

It warns rulers and householders to value inner integrity over public display: vows, rituals, and religious patronage should be grounded in sincere resolve and self-restraint, not reputation-building.

Ritually, it stresses that vrata and kriyā require saṅkalpa (true intention); without it, ritual becomes mere performance and is classified as dambha.