Pātra-Nirṇaya and Ritual Procedure: Who to Feed, Who to Avoid, and Step-by-Step Śrāddha Performance
त्रिणाचिकेतस् त्रिमधुस् त्रिसुपर्णः षडङ्गवित् वेदविच् छ्रोत्रियो योगी तथा वै ज्येष्ठसामगः
triṇāciketas trimadhus trisuparṇaḥ ṣaḍaṅgavit vedavic chrotriyo yogī tathā vai jyeṣṭhasāmagaḥ
彼は、ナーチケータの聖火を三度燃やしたトリ・ナーチケータであり、ヴェーダの智慧の甘露を三度味わったトリ・マドゥであり、三つのスパルナ讃歌を究めたトリ・スパルナである。さらに六つのヴェーダーンガに通じ、真にヴェーダを知り、シュルティに立脚するシュロートリヤであり、内なる合一に安住するヨーギーであり、最高のサーマン詠唱に成就したジェーシュタ・サーマガである。
Sage Parāśara (teaching Maitreya)
Speaker: Parasara
Topic: Definition of the ideal śrāddha-brāhmaṇa: Vedic fires, Vedic mastery, Vedāṅgas, śrotriya status, yoga, and Sāman excellence.
Teaching: Ethical
Quality: authoritative
Concept: The most worthy śrāddha-recipient unites ritual competence (fires, chants), scriptural learning (Veda, Vedāṅgas), and inner realization (yoga, śrotriya discipline).
Vedantic Theme: Dharma
Application: Seek integrated spirituality: combine study, ethical conduct, disciplined practice, and contemplative steadiness rather than one-sided religiosity.
Vishishtadvaita: Harmony of pravṛtti (ritual duty) and nivṛtti (inner yoga) reflects a Viśiṣṭādvaita-friendly synthesis where devotion and disciplined action coexist under the Lord’s order.
Bhakti Type: Shanta
They mark an ideal of Vedic mastery—ritual accomplishment (Nāciketa fire), assimilation of Vedic ‘sweet essence’ (madhu), and proficiency in specific revered hymns (Suparṇa)—signaling complete religious and contemplative qualification.
By listing both outer credentials (Veda, Vedāṅgas, śrotriya lineage, Sāman chanting) and inner attainment (yoga), Parāśara frames authority as a union of revelation-based learning and realized discipline.
The verse supports the Purāṇic view that dharma—rooted in Veda, right practice, and yogic steadiness—is the order through which Vishnu’s sovereignty is mirrored in society and sustained across cosmic ages.