Vṛṣotsarga (Bull-Release Gift): Procedure, Merit, and Narratives on Dharma, Karma, and Liberation
आशासते सुतं जातं वृषोत्सर्गं करिष्यति / धर्मस्त्वं वृषरूपेण जगदानन्ददायकः
āśāsate sutaṃ jātaṃ vṛṣotsargaṃ kariṣyati / dharmastvaṃ vṛṣarūpeṇa jagadānandadāyakaḥ
പുത്രൻ ജനിക്കുമ്പോൾ അവൻ വൃഷോത്സർഗം നടത്തുമെന്നു ജനങ്ങൾ പ്രത്യാശിക്കുന്നു. നിങ്ങൾ വൃഷരൂപത്തിൽ സ്വയം ധർമ്മം, ലോകത്തിന് ആനന്ദം നൽകുന്നവൻ.
Lord Vishnu (teaching Garuda/Vinatā-putra)
Ritual Type: Ekoddishta
Beneficiary: Pitr
Timing: Post-death śrāddha context; performed as part of funerary support rites (as described in Pretakalpa sequence)
Concept: Vṛṣotsarga as a dharmic act; the bull is Dharma’s form and a vehicle of auspicious welfare.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma as cosmic order (ṛta/dharma) manifest in symbol and rite; right action sustains loka-saṅgraha.
Application: Support elders and perform prescribed ancestral/funerary duties; treat ritual charity as an ethical commitment, not mere formality.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Pretakalpa: vṛṣotsarga/śrāddha-vidhi passages nearby in 2.6; Garuda Purana: Yama/Dharmarāja context in Pretakalpa chapters
This verse frames vṛṣotsarga as a key filial duty expected of a son, connected to Dharma itself—suggesting it supports righteous order and brings auspiciousness in post-death/ancestor contexts.
Indirectly, it emphasizes that the living—especially the son—are expected to perform prescribed rites; in the Preta Kanda these acts are taught as supportive observances for the departed and for maintaining dharma in the transition after death.
Honor dharma through responsible family duties: perform appropriate memorial/ancestor rites per tradition and means, and cultivate ethical living—since the verse equates true ritual intention with Dharma as a world-benefiting principle.