श्राद्ध-योग्य द्रव्य, निषेध, तथा गयाश्राद्ध-माहात्म्य (Śrāddha Materials, Prohibitions, and the Glory of Gayā)
अकृताग्रयणं यच् च धान्यजातं नरेश्वर राजमाषान् अणूंश् चैव मसूरांश् च विवर्जयेत्
akṛtāgrayaṇaṃ yac ca dhānyajātaṃ nareśvara rājamāṣān aṇūṃś caiva masūrāṃś ca vivarjayet
Oh señor de los hombres, no debe comerse ningún grano que aún no haya sido santificado por el rito del primer fruto (agra-yāṇa); y también han de evitarse los frijoles rājāmāṣa, el aṇu y la masūra (lenteja).
Sage Parāśara (in instruction to Maitreya, framed as guidance for righteous kings/householders)
Speaker: Parasara
Topic: Dietary/ritual restraints: avoiding unsanctified first-fruits grain and certain pulses to preserve purity and śrāddha efficacy
Teaching: Ethical
Quality: authoritative
Concept: Food and grain become fit for consumption and offering only after sanctification (agra-yāṇa/first-fruits), and certain items are to be avoided—discipline safeguards ritual purity and dharmic order.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma
Application: Adopt a ‘first offering’ principle (gratitude, prayer, sharing) before consumption, and maintain consistent dietary/ethical restraints that support spiritual practice.
Vishishtadvaita: Sanctification links material life to the Lord’s order: the world is not rejected but consecrated, aligning embodied action with divine governance (qualified non-dual engagement with matter).
Vishnu Form: Para-Brahman
Bhakti Type: Dasya
This verse treats Agra-yāṇa as a sanctifying threshold: grain should not be eaten until it is ritually acknowledged and offered, aligning daily sustenance with dharma and sacred order.
Parāśara presents diet as part of ritual purity: what is eaten affects the fitness for sacrifice, vows, and household rites, so certain grains/pulses and unconsecrated produce are to be avoided.
Even practical rules of food are framed within cosmic sovereignty: living by consecration and restraint sustains dharma, which in Vaishnava theology is ultimately upheld by Vishnu as the Supreme ground of order.