Śrāddha Vidhi: Kāla (Timing), Pātra (Recipient), and Karma (Procedure) for Pitṛ-tarpaṇa and Piṇḍa
त्रिणाचिकेतदौहित्रशिष्यसम्बन्धिबान्धवाः / कर्मनिष्ठास्तपोनिष्ठाः पञ्चाग्निब्रह्मचारिणः
triṇāciketadauhitraśiṣyasambandhibāndhavāḥ / karmaniṣṭhāstaponiṣṭhāḥ pañcāgnibrahmacāriṇaḥ
Mereka yang terikat sebagai saudara dan sahabat—seperti pelaksana tiga kali Agnicayana, pelaksana upacara api Nāciketa, para cucu, para murid, dan kaum kerabat—yang teguh dalam karma menurut dharma dan tekun dalam tapa, serta hidup sebagai brahmacārin menurut disiplin “lima api”.
Lord Viṣṇu (speaking to Garuḍa / Vinatā-putra)
Beneficiary: Pitr
Concept: Steadfastness in prescribed karma (karmanīṣṭhā) and tapas (taponīṣṭhā), including rigorous fire disciplines, constitutes exemplary dharmic life and confers ritual authority/worthiness.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-yoga as purification (citta-śuddhi) when aligned with śāstra; tapas as inner heat refining the self toward knowledge.
Application: Cultivate consistent daily discipline (study, restraint, service); if performing rites, do so with accuracy and humility; honor teachers/discipleship bonds and dharmic kinship.
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: āśrama/ritual ground
Related Themes: Garuda Purana śrāddha/pātra discussions that privilege disciplined and learned brāhmaṇas; mentions of tapas and brahmacarya as qualifications (contextual internal parallel)
This verse highlights two complementary pillars of dharma—steadfast performance of prescribed duties (karma-niṣṭhā) and dedication to austerity (tapaḥ-niṣṭhā)—as defining traits of highly disciplined, merit-bearing practitioners.
By emphasizing disciplined ritual action, austerity, and brahmacarya, the verse points to merit-accruing conduct that supports a spiritually favorable trajectory for the individual, aligning life with dharma rather than adharma.
Maintain consistency in ethical duties (service, truthfulness, daily discipline) while adopting measured austerities (self-restraint, simplicity, study), treating spiritual practice as steady conduct rather than occasional intensity.