Devotpatti-nirūpaṇa — Hari’s Pūrṇatva
Completeness) and the Ritual Doctrine of Sāra (Essence
आस्वादनं कारयति स्वयं नास्वादते हरिः / असारभोजनं चैव जीवानां कर्मजं फलम्
āsvādanaṃ kārayati svayaṃ nāsvādate hariḥ / asārabhojanaṃ caiva jīvānāṃ karmajaṃ phalam
ハリは衆生に業の果の「味わい」を経験させるが、御自身はその味を味わわれない。同様に、味気なく実のない食を食らうことも、衆生が受けねばならぬ業の果である。
Lord Vishnu (Hari) speaking to Garuda (Vinata-putra)
Concept: Īśvara orchestrates the fruition of karma (bhoga) without being an enjoyer; jīva alone undergoes taste/experience.
Vedantic Theme: Distinction between sākṣin/Īśvara and bhoktṛ-jīva; non-attachment of the Supreme; karma as experiential necessity for the bound self.
Application: Cultivate vairāgya: recognize pleasures/pains as karma-taste; reduce craving/aversion; choose actions that yield sattvic, ‘sāra’ outcomes.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Related Themes: Garuda Purana karma-phala explanations where the jīva ‘eats’ results while the Lord remains untouched; Sections describing bhoga in subtle states as karmically compelled
This verse states that beings must experience the results of their own karma, while Hari remains untouched—highlighting personal responsibility for post-death outcomes described in the Preta Kanda.
It frames after-death experiences as the soul’s compelled “tasting” of karma-phala; the conditions encountered (including deprivation like tasteless food) are presented as consequences shaped by prior deeds.
Act ethically with awareness that consequences must be personally endured; cultivate devotion and detachment, understanding that the Divine is the witness who administers order but does not ‘consume’ your actions for you.