Means of Liberation in Kali-yuga: Satsanga, Hearing Kṛṣṇa-kathā, and the Marks of a Vaiṣṇava
परस्वं ब्राह्मणद्रव्यं पश्यंति विषवच्च ये । हरिनैवेद्यं येऽश्नन्ति विज्ञेया वैष्णवा जनाः
parasvaṃ brāhmaṇadravyaṃ paśyaṃti viṣavacca ye | harinaivedyaṃ ye'śnanti vijñeyā vaiṣṇavā janāḥ
పరధనాన్ని—ప్రత్యేకించి బ్రాహ్మణ ద్రవ్యాన్ని—విషంలా భావించువారు, మరియు హరికి అర్పించిన నైవేద్యమే భుజించువారు—వారే వైష్ణవులు.
Unspecified (narrative instruction within Brahma-khaṇḍa Adhyāya 1 context)
Concept: A true Vaiṣṇava treats others’ wealth—especially brāhmaṇa property—as poison, and accepts only what is offered to Hari (prasāda) as rightful sustenance.
Application: Practice strict honesty, avoid exploitative gain, cultivate contentment, and sanctify eating by offering food to Vishnu (or mentally dedicating it) and sharing prasāda.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Type: temple
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"Inside a quiet temple kitchen, a devotee refuses a pouch of coins offered through dubious means, turning away as if from a serpent. He then receives a leaf-bowl of Hari’s prasāda from a priest, bowing with folded hands before the altar where incense curls upward.","primary_figures":["Vishnu (arcā-mūrti)","Vaiṣṇava devotee","temple priest","tempting figure offering wealth"],"setting":"Temple naivedya hall with brass lamps, banana-leaf plates, steaming rice and sweets, and a sanctum doorway adorned with garlands.","lighting_mood":"temple lamp-lit","color_palette":["lamp-flame amber","sandalwood beige","vermilion red","peacock blue","leaf green"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Vishnu sanctum with gold-leaf arch and ornate pillars; foreground devotee rejecting illicit wealth depicted as a dark pouch near a coiled-serpent motif, while receiving prasāda in a banana-leaf bowl; rich reds/greens, heavy jewelry patterns, gold embossing on lamps and halo.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: intimate indoor scene with delicate lines; a calm devotee in white cloth, a priest offering prasāda; subtle symbolic serpent near the rejected coins; cool shadows, refined faces, gentle incense haze.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines, stylized temple interior; devotee’s gesture of refusal contrasted with reverent acceptance of prasāda; strong red-yellow-green palette, patterned floor, prominent oil lamps.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central altar with Vishnu symbols, surrounding floral borders; prasāda bowls and lotus motifs; narrative vignettes of rejecting greed and accepting consecrated food; deep blue ground with gold highlights and peacock accents."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"meditative","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["soft temple bells","incense crackle","murmured mantras","conch shell (distant)","silence"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: viṣavat + ca → viṣavac ca (written: viṣavacca). ye + aśnanti → ye'śnanti.
It defines a true Vaiṣṇava as one who treats others’ property—particularly a brāhmaṇa’s wealth—as untouchable like poison, and who eats only food offered to Hari (naivedya/prasāda).
In Purāṇic ethics, harming or exploiting brāhmaṇas and their livelihood is treated as a grave offense; the verse highlights scrupulous non-appropriation and reverence toward those dedicated to sacred learning and ritual duty.
It teaches strict honesty and non-covetousness (not taking what is not given) along with devotional discipline—sanctifying one’s sustenance by accepting Hari’s consecrated offering (prasāda) as a way of life.