Teaching on Karma-yoga
Discipline of Action as Worship
ज्येष्ठो भ्राता च भर्ता च पंचैते गुरवः स्मृताः । आत्मनः सर्वयत्नेन प्राणत्यागेन वा पुनः
jyeṣṭho bhrātā ca bhartā ca paṃcaite guravaḥ smṛtāḥ | ātmanaḥ sarvayatnena prāṇatyāgena vā punaḥ
ज्येष्ठो भ्राता च भर्ता च पञ्चैते गुरवः स्मृताः। आत्मनः सर्वयत्नेन प्राणत्यागेन वा पुनः॥
Unspecified (narrative voice within Svarga-khaṇḍa 51)
Concept: Five gurus—including elder, brother, and husband—must be honored with all effort, even to the point of self-sacrifice.
Application: Translate ‘prāṇa-tyāga’ hyperbole into real-life priorities: protect elders’ dignity, support siblings, maintain marital respect, and uphold teacher/parent obligations even when inconvenient or costly.
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A solemn tableau of the pañca-guru: parents and teacher in the center, with the elder of the family, a brother, and a husband standing as protective pillars around them. The devotee kneels with offerings, while a symbolic sword laid aside indicates that true heroism is restraint and duty—service rendered even at personal cost.","primary_figures":["devotee/householder","elder (jyeṣṭha)","brother","husband (bhartā)","mother","father","teacher (ācārya)"],"setting":"Temple courtyard merging into a household threshold—suggesting that family dharma is also sacred space; offerings arranged on a brass plate.","lighting_mood":"golden dawn","color_palette":["burnished gold","royal blue","vermillion red","white jasmine","dark green"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: formal iconic arrangement of the five gurus with ornate halos; devotee offering ārati plate; gold leaf on halos, lamps, and jewelry; rich reds/greens, symmetrical composition, traditional South Indian iconography with temple pillars and decorative borders.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: refined family group in a palace-courtyard/temple threshold; delicate facial expressions showing dignity and affection; cool yet luminous palette; lyrical trees and distant hills; the devotee’s humble posture emphasized with fine linework.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: five guru figures in stylized frontal poses with bold outlines; devotee in añjali; warm red/yellow/green pigments; temple-wall aesthetic with ornamental creeper borders and lamp motifs.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: ceremonial honoring of elders framed by lotus and floral borders; peacocks and cows as auspicious witnesses; deep blue background with gold highlights; shrine elements subtly referencing Viṣṇu as the unseen center of dharma."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"devotional","suggested_raga":"Desh","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["conch shell","temple bells","mridanga pulse (soft)","footsteps in courtyard","brief silence on 'prāṇa-tyāgena'"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: पंचैते = पञ्च + एते; ज्येष्ठो = ज्येष्ठः (visarga before voiced consonant in recitation).
This line explicitly names three—jyeṣṭha (the senior/elder), bhrātā (brother), and bhartā (husband)—and implies two additional revered figures in the broader traditional list; the verse’s emphasis is that certain close relations are to be treated with guru-like reverence.
It teaches guru-veneration as a form of dharma: those regarded as ‘gurus’ should be protected and honored with wholehearted effort, even under extreme personal cost.
Across the Padma Purana, devotion (bhakti) is paired with right conduct (dharma). Reverence toward legitimate authorities—elders and guardians—supports humility, discipline, and ethical living, which are repeatedly presented as foundations for spiritual life.