The Earth Laughs at World-Conquering Kings; Yuga-Dharma and the Remedy for Kali
विद्यातप:प्राणनिरोधमैत्री- तीर्थाभिषेकव्रतदानजप्यै: । नात्यन्तशुद्धिं लभतेऽन्तरात्मा यथा हृदिस्थे भगवत्यनन्ते ॥ ४८ ॥
vidyā-tapaḥ-prāṇa-nirodha-maitrī- tīrthābhiṣeka-vrata-dāna-japyaiḥ nātyanta-śuddhiṁ labhate ’ntarātmā yathā hṛdi-sthe bhagavaty anante
Sa pagsamba sa mga diyos, pag-aayuno at pagtitika, pagpigil ng hininga, pakikipagkaibigan, pagligo sa banal na pook, mahigpit na panata, pagkakawanggawa at pagbigkas ng mga mantra, hindi pa rin nakakamit ng loob ang ganap na kadalisayan na gaya ng kapag ang Anantang Bhagavān ay nahahayag sa puso.
This verse says that the deepest purification of the inner self comes from the Supreme Lord (Ananta) being present in the heart—i.e., devotion and inner God-consciousness—more than external disciplines alone.
In the Kali-yuga context, Śukadeva teaches Parīkṣit that external practices are helpful but incomplete without direct remembrance and devotion to Bhagavān within; inner connection surpasses mere ritual performance.
Keep spiritual practices, but prioritize daily remembrance—hearing and chanting about the Lord, sincere prayer, and cultivating inner devotion—so that discipline becomes heart-transforming rather than only external.