Sadācāra–Varṇa-lakṣaṇa and Prātaḥkṛtya
Right Conduct, Social Typologies, and Morning Purification
असत्प्रतिग्रहसर्वं दुर्दानं सागरे क्षिपेत् । आहूय दानं कर्तव्यमात्मभोगसमृद्धये
asatpratigrahasarvaṃ durdānaṃ sāgare kṣipet | āhūya dānaṃ kartavyamātmabhogasamṛddhaye
Segala harta dari penerimaan yang tidak layak dan setiap pemberian yang buruk hendaknya dilemparkan ke lautan. Pemberian hendaknya dilakukan hanya setelah mengundang penerima yang pantas dengan semestinya, demi kemakmuran kesejahteraan dan kenikmatan yang benar.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Rudra
Jyotirlinga: Viśvanātha
Sthala Purana: In Kāśī’s dharma frame, ill-gotten wealth is treated as pāśa; ‘casting into the ocean’ symbolizes deliberate renunciation/destruction of tainted artha to restore purity before approaching the sacred.
Significance: Teaches prāyaścitta-like disposal of adharmic gain; supports inner cleansing so pilgrimage and worship bear fruit.
Shakti Form: Durgā
Role: destructive
Offering: naivedya
It teaches that spiritual merit in Shaiva dharma depends not only on giving, but on the purity of what is given and how it is acquired; unrighteous gains obstruct inner purity and thus hinder Shiva’s grace.
Linga worship emphasizes śuddhi (purity) of body, mind, and offering; this verse extends that principle to charity—offerings and gifts connected with Shiva worship should be dharmically obtained and given to worthy recipients.
Practice disciplined dāna: invite a deserving recipient, give from clean earnings, and before Shiva-pūjā cultivate inner restraint (niyama) so that worship with mantra and offerings is not tainted by impure acquisition.