Śrāddha’s Cosmic Reach and Kāla-Nirṇaya (Sacred Timings): Amāvāsyā, Nakṣatra-Yoga, Tīrtha, and Minimum Offerings
रत्नवस्त्रमहीयानमहाभोगादिकं वसु विभवे सति विप्रेभ्यो यो ऽस्मान् उद्दिश्य दास्यति
ratnavastramahīyānamahābhogādikaṃ vasu vibhave sati viprebhyo yo 'smān uddiśya dāsyati
ସାମର୍ଥ୍ୟ ଥିଲେ ଯେ ଆମକୁ ଉଦ୍ଦିଶ୍ୟ କରି ବ୍ରାହ୍ମଣମାନଙ୍କୁ ଧନ—ରତ୍ନ, ବସ୍ତ୍ର, ବାହନ, ମହାଭୋଗ ଇତ୍ୟାଦି—ଦାନ କରେ, ସେଇ ଦାନ ସତ୍ୟରେ ଆମ ପାଇଁ ହୁଏ।
Sage Parāśara (in instruction to Maitreya, describing śrāddha and the efficacy of gifts dedicated to ancestors)
This verse teaches that when gifts are offered to Brāhmaṇas with the explicit intention of honoring the ancestors, the act is treated as an offering that reaches the Pitṛs—making śrāddha effective through both right recipient and right dedication.
Parāśara emphasizes capacity-based giving (vibhave sati) and intentional dedication (uddiśya): one gives suitable wealth—jewels, clothing, conveyances, comforts—to Brāhmaṇas while mentally designating the ancestors as the intended beneficiaries.
Within the Vishnu Purana’s dharma framework, such rites operate under Vishnu’s cosmic governance: sustaining ancestral order and social harmony becomes a form of aligning human action with the Supreme Lord’s ordained system of duty and reciprocity.