Kṣetra–Kāla–Phala-kramaḥ
Hierarchy of Sacred Place, Time, and Ritual Fruit
वृद्धानां रुद्र बुद्ध्या हि देयं ज्ञानार्थिभिर्नरैः । बालस्त्रीभारतीबुद्ध्या बुद्धिकामैर्नरोत्तमैः
vṛddhānāṃ rudra buddhyā hi deyaṃ jñānārthibhirnaraiḥ | bālastrībhāratībuddhyā buddhikāmairnarottamaiḥ
Les hommes en quête de la vraie connaissance doivent assurément faire des offrandes aux anciens, les considérant comme Rudra Lui-même. Et les meilleurs des hommes, désireux d’une intelligence affinée, doivent donner avec l’esprit que les enfants, les femmes et les savants sont à honorer comme des incarnations de la Sagesse sacrée, Bhāratī.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva’s dharma to the sages at Naimisharanya, inferred from Purana dialogue style in this section)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Rudra
Jyotirlinga: Viśvanātha
Sthala Purana: As Viśveśvara/Viśvanātha, Śiva is honored as the indwelling Lord of all beings; this verse applies that vision ethically by seeing Rudra in elders and Bhāratī (sacred speech) in the vulnerable and the learned, making dāna a form of worship.
Significance: Cultivates Rudra-bhāva (seeing Śiva in beings), purifies intention behind dāna, and supports jñāna-bhakti as a lived discipline.
Shakti Form: Lalitā
Role: teaching
Offering: naivedya
It teaches Rudra-buddhi—seeing Shiva’s presence in the venerable and worthy—so that dāna (giving) becomes a purifier of ego and a support for jñāna, aligning conduct with devotion to Pati (Shiva).
While the Linga is the central Saguna focus of worship, this verse extends that same reverence into daily life: honoring elders and the truly learned as manifestations of Rudra and Bhāratī is a lived form of Shiva-bhakti.
Practice dāna with mantra-bhāva: before giving, inwardly cultivate Rudra-buddhi (mentally offering to Shiva), and dedicate the merit to Lord Shiva—especially on Mondays or Mahashivratri as part of Shaiva vrata observance.