Rules of Food, Acceptance, and Purity for the Twice-Born
Dvija-Śauca and Anna-Doṣa
भक्षयेन्नैव मांसानि शेषभोजी न लिप्यते / औषधार्थमशक्तौ वा नियोगाद् यज्ञकारणात्
bhakṣayennaiva māṃsāni śeṣabhojī na lipyate / auṣadhārthamaśaktau vā niyogād yajñakāraṇāt
Não se deve comer carne de modo algum. Contudo, quem se alimenta apenas do que resta (śeṣa) após o rito ou a oferenda não se mancha; do mesmo modo quando se toma por necessidade medicinal, em condição de incapacidade, ou quando é ordenado (niyoga) por causa de um yajña.
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) instructing sages on dharma and discipline
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Indirectly: it frames purity as freedom from karmic taint (lipyate). The teaching supports inner clarity for realizing the Self by minimizing actions that bind, while allowing limited, rule-bound exceptions that do not produce the same bondage.
It emphasizes yama-like discipline (restraint and purity) through regulated diet and intention. Such āhāra-niyama supports steadiness of mind, a prerequisite for meditative absorption taught in the Kurma Purana’s broader yoga-dharma context.
By grounding ethics in yajña and śāstric niyoga rather than sectarian identity, it reflects the Kurma Purana’s integrative stance: the same dharma framework underlies both Shaiva and Vaishnava spiritual paths.