An exposition on the fruits of charity and on entry into a body
Garbhotpatti, Piṇḍa-śarīra, and Antya-kāla-kriyā
मासद्वये तु सञ्जाते त्वचा मेदश्च जायते / मज्जास्थीनि त्रिभिर्मासैः केशाङ्गुल्यश्चतुर्थके
māsadvaye tu sañjāte tvacā medaśca jāyate / majjāsthīni tribhirmāsaiḥ keśāṅgulyaścaturthake
రెండవ మాసము పూర్తయినప్పుడు చర్మము మరియు మేదస్సు ఏర్పడును. మూడవ మాసమున మజ్జా మరియు ఎముకలు వికసించును; నాలుగవ మాసమున కేశములు మరియు వేళ్లు (చేతి-కాలి) కనిపించును.
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Sequential development across months: skin/fat (2nd), marrow/bones (3rd), hair/digits (4th).
Vedantic Theme: The body is an assembled aggregate (saṅghāta) with layered constituents; the Self is not any layer.
Application: Contemplate layered construction to reduce identification with appearance; encourage compassion by recognizing shared biological formation.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: bodily-inner-space
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.32.23–27 (month-wise formation)
This verse links embodiment to a precise month-by-month formation, reinforcing that taking a body is a structured karmic process—central to Preta Kanda discussions on death, the subtle body, and post-death rites.
By describing how the physical body is gradually formed, it implies the jīva’s entry into embodied life through karma; this sets the groundwork for later teachings on how the subtle body continues after death and why rites address the departed’s condition.
It encourages reverence for life and ethical conduct (dharma), reminding practitioners that birth and embodiment are not random but tied to responsibility, compassion, and right living.