The Merit of Hearing and Reciting the Vamana Purana (Phalaśruti)
दुर्भिक्षसंपीडितपुत्रभार्ये यामी सदा पोषणतत्परे च देवाग्निविप्रर्षिरते च पित्रोः शुश्रुषके भ्रातरि ज्येष्ठसाम्ने यत्तत्फलं संप्रवदन्ति देवाः स तत् फलं लभते चास्य पाठात् // वम्प्_69.10 चतुर्दशं वामनमाहुरग्र्यं श्रुते च यस्याघचयाश्च नाशम् प्रयान्ति नास्त्यत्र च संशयो मे महान्ति पापान्यपि नारदाशु
durbhikṣasaṃpīḍitaputrabhārye yāmī sadā poṣaṇatatpare ca devāgniviprarṣirate ca pitroḥ śuśruṣake bhrātari jyeṣṭhasāmne yattatphalaṃ saṃpravadanti devāḥ sa tat phalaṃ labhate cāsya pāṭhāt // VamP_69.10 caturdaśaṃ vāmanamāhuragryaṃ śrute ca yasyāghacayāśca nāśam prayānti nāstyatra ca saṃśayo me mahānti pāpānyapi nāradāśu
In a time of famine, one who is afflicted along with children and wife, yet remains ever intent on their support; who delights in (service to) the gods, the sacred fire, brāhmaṇas, and ṛṣis; who serves the parents; and who attends upon an elder brother—whatever fruit the gods declare for such conduct, that very fruit he obtains by the recitation of this (passage). They call this ‘the excellent Fourteenth (chapter/passage) of Vāmana’; by hearing it, heaps of sins are destroyed and perish—of this I have no doubt, O Nārada—even great sins swiftly.
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Famine is treated as a stress-test of dharma: when resources are scarce, sustaining dependents and continuing basic religious obligations becomes especially meritorious. The text frames endurance and responsibility (yāmī, poṣaṇa-tatpara) as exemplary righteousness.
This is a classic Purāṇic phalaśruti strategy: it sacralizes the text itself as a conduit of merit. The claim does not negate ethical duty; rather, it asserts that the narrative/section—linked here to Vāmana—functions as a powerful purifier, especially for those unable to perform extensive rites.
Many Purāṇas contain internal numbering of praised units (a chapter, subsection, or set of verses). Here ‘caturdaśa’ likely refers to a traditionally counted passage within a Vāmana-centered corpus or within a local recitation tradition. The key point is its status as ‘agrya’ (preeminent) and its asserted power to destroy accumulated sin upon hearing.