Varṇāśrama-ācāra: Common Virtues, Varṇa Duties, and the Four Āśramas
युगधर्मः परिग्राह्यो वेर्णैरेतैर्यथोचितम् । देशाचारास्तथाग्राह्याः स्मृतिधर्माविरोधतः ॥ ११ ॥
yugadharmaḥ parigrāhyo verṇairetairyathocitam | deśācārāstathāgrāhyāḥ smṛtidharmāvirodhataḥ || 11 ||
各ユガのダルマ(yuga-dharma)は、これらのヴァルナがそれぞれにふさわしく受け入れるべきである。また土地の慣習も、スムリティ(Smṛti)の説くダルマに反しない限り、受容されるべきである。
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta (peace)
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta (wonder)
It establishes a key dharmic principle: practice must suit time (yuga) and one’s station (varṇa), while remaining anchored in Smṛti-based righteousness—so spirituality stays both livable and scripturally grounded.
By implying that devotional and religious practice should be adapted to one’s context (age, community, capability) but never in ways that contradict dharma—supporting steady, rule-aligned bhakti rather than arbitrary innovation.
It highlights the applied side of Dharmaśāstra and Smṛti interpretation—how to judge custom and conduct (ācāra) against scriptural norms, a practical hermeneutic skill used in ritual and social dharma.