Yuga-Dharma, Kalpa Measure, Purāṇa Definitions, and the Kali-Yuga Power of Nāma-Kīrtana
उद्विग्नाः सन्ति च जनाः पिशाचसदृशाः प्रजाः / अन्यायभोजनेनाग्निदेवतातिथिपूजनम्
udvignāḥ santi ca janāḥ piśācasadṛśāḥ prajāḥ / anyāyabhojanenāgnidevatātithipūjanam
众人忧惧不安,心神扰乱,民众的行止如同毗舍遮般可怖;若食用以不义所得之物,则连献给火神阿耆尼、诸天与宾客(阿底提)的供奉也会被玷污,失其正法。
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Adharma-ārjita (unjustly obtained) food/wealth vitiates yajña, deva-pūjā, and atithi-satkāra; purity of means is integral to purity of rite.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-śuddhi as a prerequisite for antaḥkaraṇa-śuddhi; outer ritual without inner/ethical purity becomes fruitless.
Application: Earn and offer only through just means; treat guest-service and daily offerings as ethical disciplines, not mere formalities.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: Kali-yuga doṣa descriptions around 1.223; emphasis on śraddhā/ācāra purity elsewhere in Pretakalpa and dharma sections
This verse warns that food obtained through injustice disturbs the mind and degrades conduct, and it also contaminates acts of worship—so purity of livelihood and diet is essential for dharmic ritual merit.
It implies that karma begins with acquisition and consumption: when one eats ill-gotten food, the intention and substance behind offerings to Agni, the Devas, and guests become impure, reducing the spiritual efficacy of the ritual.
Earn and consume ethically, avoid benefiting from injustice, and treat hospitality and worship as extensions of moral living—so that puja, charity, and guest-honoring are supported by clean means.