Preta-Mokṣa Upāya: Svapna-Lakṣaṇa, Pitṛ-Doṣa, and Prescribed Rites
Kṛṣṇa-bali & Nārāyaṇa-bali
हितानामुपदेष्टा हि प्रत्यक्षं दैवतं पिता / अन्या या देवता लोके न देहप्रभवो हि ताः
hitānāmupadeṣṭā hi pratyakṣaṃ daivataṃ pitā / anyā yā devatā loke na dehaprabhavo hi tāḥ
บิดาผู้สั่งสอนสิ่งอันเป็นประโยชน์คือเทวะที่ประจักษ์ต่อหน้า ส่วนเทวะอื่น ๆ ในโลกมิใช่ผู้ให้กำเนิดกายนี้ดังเช่นบิดา
Lord Vishnu
Concept: Father is pratyakṣa-daivata because he directly teaches beneficial conduct and is the proximate cause of one’s embodiment; other deities are not bodily progenitors.
Vedantic Theme: Acknowledging proximate causes and the guru principle; dharma begins with honoring the immediate benefactor, supporting humility and ethical formation.
Application: Receive paternal/parental guidance with seriousness; repay through service, respect, and upholding family dharma.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Related Themes: Continuation of parent-as-divinity argument across 2.21.28–30; Garuda Purana discussions of guru/elder reverence and pitṛ-ṛṇa
This verse calls the father the “visible deity” because he directly guides one toward welfare and is the immediate cause of one’s embodied existence, making filial reverence a core duty (dharma).
By grounding dharma in gratitude to one’s bodily origin (parents), it supports the wider Preta-kāṇḍa ethic behind śrāddha, piṇḍa-dāna, and ancestral obligations—duties that shape merit and post-death well-being.
Treat caring for and learning from one’s father/parents as a sacred responsibility—through respect, service, truthful conduct, and fulfilling family duties—rather than viewing devotion as only temple-based worship.