Dharmopadeśa-Śānti: Rules of Impurity, Expiations, and Ancestor Rites
निशल्यकरणे चैव प्रायश्चित्तं न विद्यते । वत्सानां कण्ठबन्धेन क्रिययाभेषजेन तु ॥ ४८ ॥
niśalyakaraṇe caiva prāyaścittaṃ na vidyate | vatsānāṃ kaṇṭhabandhena kriyayābheṣajena tu || 48 ||
សម្រាប់ការដកវត្ថុបរទេសដែលជាប់ក្នុងសាច់ (ដូចជាច្រេះ ឬក្បាលព្រួញ) មិនមានពិធីស្រាយបាបកំណត់ទេ; ចំពោះកូនគោ គេគួរធ្វើតាមវិធីអនុវត្ត ដូចជាចងក្បាលក និងប្រើថ្នាំព្យាបាល។
Narada (in dialogue context with Sanatkumara tradition; instructional voice on dharma/prāyaścitta)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
It clarifies a key dharma principle: not every action requires expiation—when an act is remedial and life-protecting (like removing a lodged object), it is treated as a practical duty rather than a moral fault.
Indirectly, it supports bhakti-centered dharma by separating genuine wrongdoing from necessary care; a devotee serves life and duty without anxiety over unwarranted guilt, focusing the mind on righteous action and remembrance rather than fear.
It reflects applied dharma-śāstra reasoning (ritual jurisprudence) and recognizes medical practice (bheṣaja) and procedure (kriyā) as appropriate responses—showing how technical knowledge complements religious observance.