Kāraṇānvēṣaṇam: The 32 Marks of Hari, Defects (Doṣas), Death-Omens, and Hari’s Omnipresence in Social & Household Life
बालो हरिर्बालरूपेण कृष्णः क्षीरादिकं नवनीतं घृतं च / गृह्णाति नित्यं भूषणं वस्त्रजातमेवं दद्यात्सर्वदा विष्णुतुष्ट्यै
bālo harirbālarūpeṇa kṛṣṇaḥ kṣīrādikaṃ navanītaṃ ghṛtaṃ ca / gṛhṇāti nityaṃ bhūṣaṇaṃ vastrajātamevaṃ dadyātsarvadā viṣṇutuṣṭyai
Hari—Krishna na forma de uma criança—aceita sempre leite e derivados, manteiga fresca e ghee, e também ornamentos e vestes. Portanto, deve-se oferecer tais dádivas continuamente para a satisfação de Vishnu.
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra, as typical Garuda Purana dialogue framing)
Concept: Bāla-rūpa Hari (Kṛṣṇa) gladly accepts simple sattvic offerings (milk, butter, ghee) and also garments/ornaments; constant giving pleases Viṣṇu.
Vedantic Theme: Īśvara as bhakta-vatsala (responsive to love), accepting offerings through devotion rather than need; karma transmuted into bhakti by dedication.
Application: Offer daily naivedya (milk/butter/ghee as appropriate) and donate clothing/ornaments (or their equivalent) with the intention of pleasing Vishnu; keep devotion consistent.
Primary Rasa: shringara
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: household
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.22.73-74 (Hari omnipresence → concrete devotional offering)
This verse states that Krishna as Bala-Hari accepts dairy offerings like milk, butter, and ghee; giving them as naivedya or dana is presented as a direct means to please Vishnu.
While Garuda Purana is famous for afterlife and preta-karmas, it also teaches bhakti and merit-making; here it emphasizes devotional charity and offerings as spiritually efficacious acts.
Offer simple sattvic items (milk, ghee, butter) with devotion, and practice charity by giving clothing or essentials—done with the intention of Vishnu’s pleasure rather than display.