वेद्यं च यद् वेदयते च वेद्यं विधिश्व यश्व श्रयते विधेयम् । धर्मे च वेदे च बले च सर्व चराचरं केशवं त्वं प्रतीहि
vedyaṃ ca yad vedayate ca vedyaṃ vidhiś ca yaś ca śrayate vidheyam | dharme ca vede ca bale ca sarvaṃ carācaraṃ keśavaṃ tvaṃ pratīhi ||
Wika ni Bhishma: “Alamin ninyo nang may matibay na pananalig: ang dapat malaman, at ang nakaaalam na nagsisikap makaalam sa dapat malaman; ang mismong simulain ng kautusan (vidhi), at ang taong umaasa sa ipinag-uutos na dapat gawin (vidheya)—ang lahat ng ito’y nakasalig sa Dharma, sa Veda, at sa banal na kapangyarihan. Unawain na ang buong sansinukob, ang gumagalaw at ang di-gumagalaw, ay walang iba kundi si Keshava (Krishna) mismo.”
भीष्म उवाच
Bhishma teaches a comprehensive theistic vision: the knowable truth, the knower, the scriptural injunction, and the prescribed act—all are ultimately grounded in and pervaded by Keshava. Hence Dharma and Vedic authority culminate in recognizing Krishna as the inner reality of the entire cosmos (carācara).
In Anushasana Parva, Bhishma instructs Yudhishthira on dharma and higher spiritual understanding. Here he elevates the discussion from ritual and duty to metaphysical assurance, urging unwavering conviction that all categories of knowledge and action, and the whole world itself, are forms of Krishna.