Nārada’s Instructions: Śrāddha, True Dharma, Contentment, Yoga, and Devotion-Centered Renunciation
निषेकादिश्मशानान्तै: संस्कारै: संस्कृतो द्विज: । इन्द्रियेषु क्रियायज्ञान् ज्ञानदीपेषु जुह्वति ॥ ५२ ॥
niṣekādi-śmaśānāntaiḥ saṁskāraiḥ saṁskṛto dvijaḥ indriyeṣu kriyā-yajñān jñāna-dīpeṣu juhvati
一位二次出生的婆罗门,自受胎等净化仪式起,直至临终火葬等诸“萨姆斯卡拉”而得以成就;久而久之,他对物质行为与祭祀不再贪著。于是以智慧为火,以觉知为灯,将感官之行作为“行为之祭”投入被知识之光照耀的诸作业根中,使内心得以净化。
Those interested in materialistic activities remain in the cycle of birth and death. Pravṛtti-mārga, or the inclination to stay in the material world to enjoy varieties of sense gratification, has been explained in the previous verse. Now, in this verse, it is explained that one who has perfect brahminical knowledge rejects the process of elevation to higher planets and accepts nivṛtti-mārga; in other words, he prepares himself to go back home, back to Godhead. Those who are not brāhmaṇas but atheists do not know what is pravṛtti-mārga or nivṛtti-mārga; they simply want to obtain pleasure at any cost. Our Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement is therefore training devotees to give up the pravṛtti-mārga and accept the nivṛtti-mārga in order to return home, back to Godhead. This is a little difficult to understand, but it is very easy if one takes to Kṛṣṇa consciousness seriously and tries to understand Kṛṣṇa. A Kṛṣṇa conscious person can understand that performing yajña according to the karma-kāṇḍa system is a useless waste of time and that merely giving up the karma-kāṇḍa and accepting the process of speculation is also unfruitful. Therefore Narottama dāsa Ṭhākura has sung in his Prema-bhakti-candrikā:
This verse explains that a dvija is refined by saṁskāras from conception up to the final rite at the cremation ground, indicating that Vedic life is meant to progressively purify one’s existence and consciousness.
Prahlāda teaches that true purification is not only external ritual; when the senses are guided by the ‘lamp of knowledge,’ one’s activities become offerings—disciplined, sanctified, and spiritually directed.
Treat daily actions (work, speech, consumption) as conscious offerings by regulating the senses with spiritual understanding—choosing habits that increase clarity, self-control, and devotion rather than indulgence.