Vāmana’s Advent, Aditi’s Hymn, Bali’s Gift, and the Mahatmya of Bhū-dāna
प्रतिग्रहनिवृत्ता ये परान्नविमुखास्तथा । अन्नोदकप्रदातारो वहंति सततं हि माम् ॥ ६४ ॥
pratigrahanivṛttā ye parānnavimukhāstathā | annodakapradātāro vahaṃti satataṃ hi mām || 64 ||
Those who refrain from accepting gifts, who do not disdain another’s food (who do not reject hospitality), and who give food and water—such people indeed always bear Me within themselves.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a dharma-upadesha context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
It teaches that inner proximity to the Lord is cultivated through ethical restraint (not living by taking gifts) and compassion expressed as anna-dāna and udaka-dāna—basic, life-sustaining charity.
Bhakti is shown as practical devotion: honoring others’ offerings without contempt and serving living beings by giving food and water—actions that make the devotee a constant vessel of the Lord’s presence.
It reflects dharma-sūtra style applied ethics—rules of conduct around pratigraha (accepting gifts) and dāna (charity), guiding householders and renunciants in socially sustaining ritual-culture.