Pāpa-bheda, Naraka-yātanā, Mahāpātaka-vicāra, Atonement Limits, Daśa-vidhā Bhakti, and Gaṅgā as Final Remedy
अभोज्यभोजी संप्राप्यं विङ्भोज्यं तु समायुतम् । ततश्चण्डालयोनौ तु गोमांसाशी सदा भवेत् ॥ १२० ॥
abhojyabhojī saṃprāpyaṃ viṅbhojyaṃ tu samāyutam | tataścaṇḍālayonau tu gomāṃsāśī sadā bhavet || 120 ||
ผู้ที่กินสิ่งต้องห้ามย่อมตกสู่สภาพต้องกินอุจจาระเป็นอาหาร ต่อจากนั้นเกิดในครรภ์จัณฑาล และเป็นผู้กินเนื้อวัวอยู่เสมอ
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bibhatsa
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
It frames diet (āhāra) as a dharmic discipline: consuming prohibited food is treated as a serious pāpa that degrades one’s purity and leads to painful karmic results, including degraded births.
Though not directly teaching bhakti, it supports bhakti’s foundation—inner and outer purity. Restraint in food is presented as necessary conduct for a sādhaka whose life is oriented toward dharma and spiritual uplift.
It reflects practical dharma-śāstric application (linked with Kalpa—ritual and conduct): rules of permissible/impermissible food and the karmic logic behind maintaining śauca (purity).