Bhadrā and Mitravindā: The Fruits of Namaskāra, Pradakṣiṇā, Hari-nāma, and Śravaṇa of Bhāgavata Kathā
धनार्जने ये त्वतितृष्णाभियुक्तास्तेषां न वै भागवतेधिकारः / मत्वा लोके हरिरेवति नित्यमन्तर्यामी नास्ति तदन्य ईशः
dhanārjane ye tvatitṛṣṇābhiyuktāsteṣāṃ na vai bhāgavatedhikāraḥ / matvā loke harirevati nityamantaryāmī nāsti tadanya īśaḥ
ຜູ້ໃດຖືກຄວາມຢາກໄດ້ຊັບສິນຢ່າງເກີນຂອບເຂດຄອບງຳ ຜູ້ນັ້ນບໍ່ມີສິດອັນແທ້ໃນທາງພາກະວະຕະ. ຈົ່ງຮູ້ວ່າໃນໂລກນີ້ ຮະຣິເທົ່ານັ້ນເປັນພະຍານພາຍໃນ (ອັນຕະຣະຍາມິນ) ຢູ່ເສມອ ແລະບໍ່ມີອົງພຣະເຈົ້າອື່ນນອກຈາກພຣະອົງ—ຈົ່ງຕັ້ງຈິດໃນຄວາມເຂົ້າໃຈນັ້ນ.
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda)
Concept: Excessive greed for wealth blocks eligibility for Bhagavata devotion; one should abide in the certainty that Hari alone is the inner ruler and there is no other Ishvara.
Vedantic Theme: Antaryamin doctrine; eka-ishvara-vada; vairagya as prerequisite for bhakti/jnana; rejection of dual lordship.
Application: Reduce dhanatrsna through dana and contentment; daily recollection 'Hari alone is my inner witness'; prioritize satsanga and bhagavata-shravana over accumulation.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Related Themes: Garuda Purana (Uttara/Pretakalpa sections): repeated insistence that Vishnu-smriti at death overrides fear and delusion; Garuda Purana: teachings on vairagya and the futility of artha without dharma/bhakti (general thematic parallel)
This verse states that intense greed for wealth disqualifies a person from genuine Bhāgavata devotion; inner purity and reduced craving are presented as prerequisites.
It teaches that Hari alone is the constant indwelling witness and ruler within all beings, implying spiritual practice should be grounded in awareness of His presence rather than external status or wealth.
Moderate wealth-seeking, cultivate contentment, and regularly reflect that the true authority within is the Divine witness—letting that guide ethical choices and devotion.