Śrāddha-vidhi for Pitṛs: Invitations, Purity, Offerings, and Conduct
शुचिरक्रोधनः शान्तः सत्यवादी समाहितः / स्वाध्यायं च तथाध्वानं कर्ता भोक्ता च वर्जयेत्
śucirakrodhanaḥ śāntaḥ satyavādī samāhitaḥ / svādhyāyaṃ ca tathādhvānaṃ kartā bhoktā ca varjayet
Hendaklah seseorang suci, tidak pemarah, tenang, berkata benar, dan berhimpun batin. Hendaklah ia memelihara svādhyāya (pembacaan suci) dan dhyāna (meditasi); serta meninggalkan sangkaan “akulah pelaku” dan “akulah penikmat”.
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) instructing King Indradyumna in the Upari-bhāga’s yogic-dharma teachings
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
By instructing the abandonment of the notions “I am the doer” and “I am the enjoyer,” it points to the Self as witness-consciousness beyond egoic agency and possession—an Atman aligned with the Lord’s higher sovereignty rather than personal appropriation.
It prescribes foundational yama-like virtues (purity, non-anger, peace, truthfulness, collectedness) and explicitly emphasizes svādhyāya (scriptural self-study/recitation) and dhyāna (meditative contemplation), framing them as supports for dissolving egoic agency in Pāśupata-oriented practice.
Though not naming them directly, the verse embodies the Purana’s synthesis: devotion and discipline culminate in relinquishing egoic doership—an insight shared across Shaiva Pāśupata yoga and Vaishnava teachings on surrender to the Supreme Lord.