Sṛṣṭi-krama, Pratibimba-Upādhi, and Viṣṇu as Primary Brahman
with Pralaya and Nāma-Stuti
सर्वापराधाद्रहितं दानमानैर्युक्तं सदा तारतम्याच्च हीनम् / दृष्ट्वापराधं तस्य विष्णुर्महात्मा हाहाकारं कुरुते क्रोधबुद्ध्या
sarvāparādhādrahitaṃ dānamānairyuktaṃ sadā tāratamyācca hīnam / dṛṣṭvāparādhaṃ tasya viṣṇurmahātmā hāhākāraṃ kurute krodhabuddhyā
Aunque una dádiva esté libre de toda falta y vaya siempre acompañada del debido honor, si se ofrece sin el recto discernimiento de la gradación (dignidad y conveniencia), el magnánimo Viṣṇu—al ver tal impropiedad—lanza un clamor de angustia, con la mente agitada por la ira.
Lord Vishnu (teaching Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Even ‘faultless’ charity becomes improper if given without tāratamya-viveka (discernment of recipient-worthiness and contextual propriety).
Vedantic Theme: Karma requires right intention and right ordering (niyama); dharma is subtle (sūkṣma) and not reducible to external correctness.
Application: Practice discerning generosity: verify need, integrity, and impact; honor recipients appropriately; avoid performative giving that violates ethical gradations.
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: dāna, śrāddha, and recipient-qualification discussions where improper offering yields diminished or adverse results
This verse says that even a well-intentioned, respectful gift becomes deficient if offered without proper discernment of worthiness and appropriateness; that lack itself is treated as an aparādha.
It frames “improper giving” as a real fault: Viṣṇu is portrayed as reacting strongly when an offering violates dharmic propriety, implying that ritual and ethical correctness governs the merit of dāna.
Give with respect, but also with discernment—support genuinely suitable causes/recipients and follow correct procedures—so that charity remains dharmic and does not become an avoidable impropriety.