Dharmānukathana
Narration of Dharma
धर्माणि विष्णुश्च फलानि विष्णुः कर्माणि विष्णुश्च फलानि भोक्ता । कार्यं च विष्णुः करणानि विष्णुरस्मान्न किञ्चिद्व्यतिरिक्तमस्ति ॥ १५३ ॥
dharmāṇi viṣṇuśca phalāni viṣṇuḥ karmāṇi viṣṇuśca phalāni bhoktā | kāryaṃ ca viṣṇuḥ karaṇāni viṣṇurasmānna kiñcidvyatiriktamasti || 153 ||
ダルマはヴィシュヌであり、果もまたヴィシュヌ。行為はヴィシュヌであり、その果を享受する者もヴィシュヌである。結果もヴィシュヌ、手段もヴィシュヌ—彼を離れては、何ものも存在しない。
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It teaches a Vishnu-centered totality: dharma, action, the means, the result, and the experiencer are all ultimately Vishnu—cultivating a unified vision that dissolves separateness and supports liberation.
By seeing every duty and every result as belonging to Vishnu, the devotee offers both action and outcome to Him, transforming karma into devotional surrender and steady remembrance (smaraṇa).
Rather than a technical Vedanga lesson (like Vyākaraṇa or Jyotiṣa), the verse gives the practical hermeneutic for rituals: whatever the rite, its instruments and fruits should be understood and dedicated as Vishnu, which aligns ritual performance with moksha-oriented intent.