Varṇāśrama-ācāra: Common Virtues, Varṇa Duties, and the Four Āśramas
सर्वे च मुनितां यांति स्वाश्रमोचितकर्मणा । ब्राह्मणः क्षत्रियाचारमाश्रयेदापदि द्विज ॥ ३० ॥
sarve ca munitāṃ yāṃti svāśramocitakarmaṇā | brāhmaṇaḥ kṣatriyācāramāśrayedāpadi dvija || 30 ||
Todos alcanzan el estado de los muni cumpliendo las obras propias de su āśrama. Pero en tiempo de aflicción, oh dvija, un brāhmaṇa puede adoptar la conducta de un kṣatriya.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a dharma-discourse context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
It teaches that spiritual elevation (munitva) comes primarily through faithfully performing one’s own āśrama duties, while also acknowledging a carefully bounded exception (āpaddharma) during crises.
Indirectly, it frames devotion as lived dharma: steadiness in one’s ordained responsibilities supports purity and discipline, which in turn sustains sincere worship; emergencies allow practical adaptation without abandoning righteousness.
It highlights Dharmic application rather than a specific Vedāṅga: the interpretive principle of āpaddharma—how smṛti-based conduct adjusts to time, place, and necessity while preserving ethical intent.