Threefold Suffering, Twofold Knowledge, and the Definition of Bhagavān (Vāsudeva); Prelude to Keśidhvaja–Janaka Yoga
अन्येषां दोपजानेव धर्ममेवानुरुध्यते । न याच्ञा क्षत्रबंधूनां धर्मायैतत्सतां मतम् ॥ ८२ ॥
anyeṣāṃ dopajāneva dharmamevānurudhyate | na yācñā kṣatrabaṃdhūnāṃ dharmāyaitatsatāṃ matam || 82 ||
សម្រាប់អ្នកដទៃ ធម៌ត្រូវបានអនុវត្តដូចជាផលចំណេញបន្ទាប់បន្សំតែប៉ុណ្ណោះ។ តែសម្រាប់ក្សត្រពិត ការសុំទានមិនត្រូវបានចាត់ទុកថាជាវិធីរក្សាធម៌ឡើយ—នេះជាទស្សនៈរបស់អ្នកសុចរិត។
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in Moksha-Dharma context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: none
It frames dharma as integrity in one’s ordained duty (svadharma): the virtuous hold that sustaining righteousness must not be done through actions that contradict one’s role, such as a kṣatriya resorting to begging.
Indirectly, it supports bhakti through disciplined conduct: devotion is strengthened when one lives honestly and in harmony with dharma, avoiding degraded means of livelihood that weaken character and inner steadiness.
It reflects Dharmaśāstra-based social ethics rather than a specific Vedāṅga; the practical takeaway is role-based conduct (ācāra) and proper means of sustenance aligned with varṇa-dharma.