Yuga-Dharma, Kalpa Measure, Purāṇa Definitions, and the Kali-Yuga Power of Nāma-Kīrtana
कृतत्रेताद्वापरादियुगावस्था निबोधमे / कृते धर्मश्चतुष्पाच्च सत्यं दानं तपो दया
kṛtatretādvāparādiyugāvasthā nibodhame / kṛte dharmaścatuṣpācca satyaṃ dānaṃ tapo dayā
当从我处了知诸时代的情状——克利多(Kṛta)、特雷塔(Tretā)、德瓦帕拉(Dvāpara)等。在克利多(萨提亚,Satya)瑜伽中,达摩以四足坚立:真实、布施、苦行与慈悲。
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: In Kṛta/Satya-yuga, dharma is fourfold and complete: satya, dāna, tapas, dayā.
Vedantic Theme: Ethical purity as a foundation for sattva and spiritual clarity; dharma as the stabilizing order that supports higher realization.
Application: Cultivate the four ‘feet’ daily: truthfulness in speech, generosity, disciplined self-restraint, and compassion in action.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: yuga-dharma and decline of dharma across ages; Garuda Purana: praise of satya and daya as purifying virtues
This verse frames Dharma as varying by age, establishing that the highest ethical standard is in Kṛta Yuga where Dharma is complete—guiding readers to uphold those same virtues as timeless ideals.
By emphasizing truth, charity, austerity, and compassion as complete Dharma, it implies that living aligned with these supports purifies karma and supports a favorable post-death journey described elsewhere in the Garuda Purana.
Practice the four supports daily: speak truth, give regularly, maintain disciplined restraint, and act with compassion—treating them as a personal standard even in later yugas.