Jīva–Ātman Inquiry; Kṣetrajña Doctrine; Karma-based Varṇa; Four Āśramas and Sannyāsa Discipline
स्वनुक्रोशश्च भूतेषु तद्द्विजातिषु लक्षणम् । सत्यंव्रतं तपः शौचं सत्यं विसृजते प्रजा ॥ ८१ ॥
svanukrośaśca bhūteṣu taddvijātiṣu lakṣaṇam | satyaṃvrataṃ tapaḥ śaucaṃ satyaṃ visṛjate prajā || 81 ||
对一切众生怀悲悯之心——此乃“二生者”(dvija)的标志。然而世人却舍弃真理:守真之誓、苦行(tapas)、清净,乃至真理本身,都被社会抛诸一旁。
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in the Moksha-Dharma discourse)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It defines true dvija-hood not by birth alone but by universal compassion, and warns that abandoning satya (truth) causes the collapse of vows, austerity, and purity—core supports of Moksha-Dharma.
Bhakti is grounded in sattvic conduct: compassion, truthfulness, and inner purity. The verse implies that devotion without satya, tapas, and shaucha becomes hollow and cannot mature into liberating devotion.
It emphasizes dharmic discipline rather than a technical Vedanga: satya-vrata (ethical vow), tapas (regulated practice), and shaucha (ritual and mental purity) as practical prerequisites for Vedic life and sadhana.