Pāpa-bheda, Naraka-yātanā, Mahāpātaka-vicāra, Atonement Limits, Daśa-vidhā Bhakti, and Gaṅgā as Final Remedy
अनर्प्पितानि कर्माणि भस्मविन्यस्तद्रव्यवत् । नित्यं नैमित्तिकं काम्यं यच्चान्यन्मोक्षमाधनम् ॥ १३७ ॥
anarppitāni karmāṇi bhasmavinyastadravyavat | nityaṃ naimittikaṃ kāmyaṃ yaccānyanmokṣamādhanam || 137 ||
جو اعمال خداوند کو ارپت نہیں کیے جاتے وہ راکھ میں رکھے ہوئے مال کی مانند بےثمر ہیں؛ نِتیہ، نیمِتّک، کامیہ یا موکش کے لیے اختیار کیے گئے دیگر سبھی سادھن ارپণ سے ہی بامعنی ہوتے ہیں۔
Sanatkumara (in instruction to Narada, within the Narada–Sanatkumara dialogue)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It teaches that any practice—ritual, duty, or even a liberation-oriented discipline—becomes spiritually effective only when offered with devotion; otherwise it is wasted effort, like wealth thrown into ashes.
Bhakti is implied as the consecrating principle: dedicating (arpana) one’s actions to the Lord transforms all karma—nitya, naimittika, and kāmya—into worship and makes it a support for inner purification and liberation.
It classifies Vedic action into nitya, naimittika, and kāmya categories—an applied ritual framework used in Dharmaśāstra and Śrauta/Smārta practice—while stressing that correct intention and dedication are essential for the rite’s true efficacy.