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Shloka 10

राज्ञोऽभिषेकः, अराजकदोषः, दण्डधारणस्य आवश्यकता

Royal Consecration, the Fault of Kinglessness, and the Necessity of Enforcement

आह्रिकं पितृयज्ञांश्व भूतयज्ञान्‌ समानुषान्‌ । कुर्वतः पार्थ विपुलान्‌ वन्याश्रमपदं भवेत्‌,कुन्तीनन्दन! जो नित्यप्रति संध्या-वन्दन आदि नित्यकर्म, पितृश्राद्ध, भूतयज्ञ, मनुष्ययज्ञ (अतिथि-सेवा)--इन सबका अनुष्ठान प्रचुर मात्रामें करता रहता है, उसे वानप्रस्थाश्रमके सेवनसे मिलनेवाले पुण्यफलकी प्राप्ति होती है

āhrikaṃ pitṛyajñāṃś ca bhūtayajñān samānuṣān | kurvataḥ pārtha vipulān vanyāśramapadaṃ bhavet ||

Bhīṣma berkata: “Wahai Pārtha, bagi sesiapa yang melaksanakan dengan banyaknya upacara wajib harian, persembahan kepada leluhur, korban suci untuk makhluk (bhūta-yajña), dan korban suci untuk manusia (melayani tetamu), akan timbul pahala yang sama seperti yang diperoleh dengan memasuki āśrama vānaprastha.”

{'āhrikam''daily obligatory observances (nitya-karman), especially sandhyā rites and routine duties', 'pitṛyajñān': 'rites/sacrifices to the ancestors
{'āhrikam':
śrāddha and related offerings', 'bhūtayajñān''offerings to living beings/creatures
śrāddha and related offerings', 'bhūtayajñān':
acts that sustain and protect life (e.g., feeding, non-harm, sharing)', 'samānuṣān (mānuṣa-yajña)''human sacrifice in the sense of service to humans—hospitality to guests (atithi-sevā), charity, care', 'kurvataḥ': 'of one who performs/practices', 'pārtha': 'O son of Pṛthā (Arjuna)', 'vipulān': 'abundant, extensive, in great measure', 'vanya-āśrama-padam': 'the status/fruit of the forest-dweller stage (vānaprastha)', 'bhavet': 'comes to be
acts that sustain and protect life (e.g., feeding, non-harm, sharing)', 'samānuṣān (mānuṣa-yajña)':

भीष्म उवाच

B
Bhishma
A
Arjuna (Partha)

Educational Q&A

Bhīṣma teaches that steadfast performance of daily duties and the four key social-sacrificial obligations—toward ancestors, living beings, and guests—can yield the same spiritual merit as formally adopting the vānaprastha (forest-dweller) stage. Dharma is measured by sustained practice and generosity, not only by external renunciation.

In Śānti Parva, Bhīṣma instructs Arjuna on dharma and right conduct after the war. Here he emphasizes household-based disciplines—daily rites, śrāddha, care for beings, and hospitality—presenting them as a powerful path whose fruit equals that of the forest-ascetic life.