The Teaching on Śiva-Dharma and the Supremacy of Food-Giving
within the Pitṛtīrtha–Yayāti Episode
अन्नप्रदातुस्तस्यार्धं कर्तुश्चार्धं न संशयः । धर्मार्थकाममोक्षाणां देहः परमसाधनम्
annapradātustasyārdhaṃ kartuścārdhaṃ na saṃśayaḥ | dharmārthakāmamokṣāṇāṃ dehaḥ paramasādhanam
పుణ్యములో సగము అన్నదాతకు, సగము దానము చేయించువానికి—సందేహము లేదు; ధర్మార్థకామమోక్షములకు దేహమే పరమ సాధనము।
Not explicitly identifiable from the single verse (context needed from surrounding verses of Bhūmi-khaṇḍa 69).
Concept: Merit is shared: the donor and the facilitator both receive equal halves; the body is the chief means for pursuing the four puruṣārthas.
Application: If you cannot personally serve, sponsor meals or organize others to do so; treat health, rest, and diet as dharma-supporting disciplines; use bodily capacity for seva rather than vanity.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A patron gestures toward a line of servers distributing food—one gives directly, another funds and coordinates; above them, a balanced scale of light symbolizes ‘half and half’ merit. In the background, a subtle four-petaled emblem represents dharma, artha, kāma, and mokṣa, anchored in the human body as the central tool.","primary_figures":["patron/sponsor","servers/volunteers","recipients","a sage observing (as moral witness)"],"setting":"Public feeding pavilion near a temple gateway with banners and orderly queues","lighting_mood":"divine radiance","color_palette":["ivory white","royal blue","antique gold","crimson","sage green"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: a sponsor seated with palm-leaf ledger and donation pot, volunteers serving food in the foreground, a luminous golden scale motif above indicating shared merit, ornate temple arch behind, heavy gold leaf on vessels and halos, rich reds/greens with jewel-like highlights.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: refined courtly patronage—soft pastel architecture, sponsor pointing toward charity in progress, delicate figures and calm expressions, a symbolic four-petaled puruṣārtha motif painted like a floating mandala, cool mountain palette with warm gold accents.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlined composition—two central figures (giver and organizer) mirrored symmetrically, stylized scale icon above, puruṣārtha lotus emblem behind the human form, flat pigments and temple-wall rhythm.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central lotus mandala with four petals labeled by symbolism (not text), attendants distributing prasāda, ornate borders with vines and lotuses, deep blue ground with gold, devotional framing that equates organized charity with Krishna’s seva."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"authoritative","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["handbell","conch shell","measured drum (mridangam)","crowd murmur","brief pauses"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: annapradātus = anna-pradātuḥ; tasyārdham = tasya ardham; kartuścārdham = kartuḥ ca ardham; dharmārthakāmamokṣāṇām = dharma-artha-kāma-mokṣāṇām
It teaches shared moral credit: the merit of feeding others is divided equally between the one who donates food and the one who enables or commissions the act.
Because all four human aims—dharma (duty), artha (means), kāma (fulfillment), and mokṣa (liberation)—are pursued through embodied life; without the body, disciplined action and spiritual practice cannot be carried out.
Supporting charity indirectly—organizing, funding, or facilitating feeding programs—shares in the merit alongside direct giving, and caring for the body is affirmed as essential for both worldly responsibilities and spiritual progress.