Dāna-dharma: Threefold Classification, Right Recipients, Auspicious Timing, and Fruits of Gifts
भूमिदः सर्वमाप्नोति दीर्घमायुर्हिरण्यदः / गृहदो ऽग्र्याणि वेश्मानि रूप्यदो रूपमुत्तमम्
bhūmidaḥ sarvamāpnoti dīrghamāyurhiraṇyadaḥ / gṛhado 'gryāṇi veśmāni rūpyado rūpamuttamam
भूमिदः सर्वमाप्नोति दीर्घमायुर्हिरण्यदः। गृहदोऽग्र्याणि वेश्मानि रूप्यदो रूपमुत्तमम्॥
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda)
Concept: Great gifts yield great fruits: land→all attainments, gold→long life, house→excellent dwellings, silver→superior beauty.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-phala and loka-sangraha: wealth used in dharma becomes a means of purification and welfare.
Application: Use resources for lasting benefit—support housing, land stewardship, and endowments; give proportionate to capacity with right intention.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.51.22 (basic dana); Garuda Purana 1.51.24 (dana leading to specific lokas)
This verse states that specific gifts (land, gold, house, silver) produce corresponding fruits—overall prosperity, longevity, superior residence, and beauty—showing dāna as a core dharmic practice that generates puṇya.
By linking charitable acts to meritorious outcomes, it implies that one’s post-death condition and overall destiny are shaped by karma—especially dharmic giving that builds spiritual merit.
Practice intentional giving: support housing/shelter, donate resources responsibly, and share wealth for welfare—treating generosity as a disciplined dharmic habit rather than occasional charity.