Tapas-śreṣṭhatā: Anāśana as the Highest Austerity
Bhagīratha–Brahmā Saṃvāda
हिरण्यरत्ननिचयानददं रत्नपर्वतान् । धनधान्यसमृद्धा श्च ग्रामाश्चान्ये सहस्रश:
Bhagīratha uvāca: hiraṇya-ratna-nicayān adadaṁ ratna-parvatān | dhana-dhānya-samṛddhāś ca grāmāś cānye sahasraśaḥ ||
Dijo Bhagīratha: «He dado montones de oro y joyas, incluso montañas de gemas; y he donado miles y miles de aldeas, ricas en bienes y en grano. Y, sin embargo, no es por el mérito de esas dádivas que he llegado a este estado».
भगीरथ उवाच
Even immense acts of charity—gold, jewels, and prosperous villages—do not automatically guarantee the highest spiritual outcome; merit from giving has limits unless aligned with deeper dharma, inner purity, and the right ultimate aim.
Bhagīratha recounts the scale of his donations—vast treasures and thousands of prosperous villages—then emphasizes that his present attainment (or arrival in a particular state) is not due merely to the merit of those gifts, preparing the listener for a subtler explanation of true causality and dharma.