Vāmana’s Advent, Aditi’s Hymn, Bali’s Gift, and the Mahatmya of Bhū-dāna
यो देवस्त्यक्तसङ्गानां शान्तानं करुणार्णवः । करोति ह्यात्मनः सङ्गं तं देवं सङ्गवर्जितम् ॥ २७ ॥
yo devastyaktasaṅgānāṃ śāntānaṃ karuṇārṇavaḥ | karoti hyātmanaḥ saṅgaṃ taṃ devaṃ saṅgavarjitam || 27 ||
那位神祇——对已离执著、心地寂静者如慈悲大海——确实将他们纳入祂亲密的同在;而祂自身却超然无著,远离一切执取。
Sanatkumāra (teaching Nārada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
It teaches that the Lord, though eternally unattached, compassionately grants His own divine association to those who become peaceful and free from worldly attachment—showing grace as the bridge from renunciation to liberation.
Bhakti here is marked by inner detachment (tyakta-saṅga) and calmness (śānta). When devotion is purified of clinging, the Lord draws the devotee into closeness with Himself, without the Lord being bound by any attachment.
No specific Vedāṅga (like Vyākaraṇa, Jyotiṣa, or Kalpa) is taught directly; the practical takeaway is ethical-spiritual discipline—cultivating vairāgya (non-attachment) and śama (tranquility) as prerequisites for higher knowledge and devotion.