yad ghrÄṇa-bhaká¹£o vihitaḥ surÄyÄs
tathÄ paÅ›or Älabhanaá¹ na hiá¹sÄ
evaá¹ vyavÄyaḥ prajayÄ na ratyÄ
imaṠviśuddhaṠna viduḥ sva-dharmam
yat - because; ghrÄṇa - by smell; bhaká¹£aḥ - the taking; vihitaḥ - is enjoined; surÄyÄḥ - of wine; tathÄ - similarly; paÅ›oḥ - of a sacrificial animal; Älabhanam - prescribed killing; na - not; hiá¹sÄ - wanton violence; evam - in the same way; vyavÄyaḥ - sex; prajayÄ - for the purpose of begetting children; na - not; ratyai - for the sake of sense enjoyment; imam - this (as pointed out in the previous verse); viÅ›uddham - most pure; na viduḥ - they do not understand; sva-dharmam - their own proper duty.
MadhvÄcÄrya has given the following statement in regard to animal sacrifice:
yajñeá¹£v Älabhanaá¹ proktaá¹
devatoddeśataḥ paśoḥ
himsÄ nÄma tad-anyatra
tasmÄt tÄá¹ nÄcared budhaḥ
yato yajñe má¹›tÄ Å«rdhvaá¹
yÄnti deve ca paitá¹›ke
ato lÄbhÄd Älabhanaá¹
svargasya na tu mÄraṇam
According to this statement, the Vedas sometimes prescribe animal sacrifice in ritual performances for the satisfaction of the Supreme Lord or a particular demigod. If, however, one whimsically slaughters animals without rigidly following the Vedic prescriptions, such killing is actual violence and should not be accepted by any intelligent person. If the animal sacrifice is perfectly performed, the sacrificed animal immediately goes to the heavenly planets of the demigods and the forefathers. Therefore such a sacrifice is not for killing animals but for demonstrating the potency of Vedic mantras, by the power of which the sacrificed creature is immediately promoted to a higher situation.
Caitanya MahÄprabhu, however, has forbidden such animal sacrifice in this age because there are no qualified brÄhmaṇas to chant the mantras, and the so-called sacrificial arena becomes an ordinary butcher shop. And in an earlier era, when unscrupulous persons tried to establish that animal killing and meat-eating are acceptable by misinterpreting the Vedic sacrifices, Lord Buddha personally appeared and rejected their heinous proposition. This is described by Jayadeva GosvÄmÄ«:
nindasi yajña-vidher ahaha Å›ruti-jÄtaá¹
sadaya-há¹›daya darÅ›ita-paÅ›u-ghÄtam
keśava dhṛta-buddha-śarīra
jaya jagad-īśa hare
Unfortunately, the conditioned souls are afflicted by four imperfections, one of which is the cheating propensity, and thus they tend to exploit the concessions that the Lord mercifully gives to them in religious scriptures for their gradual purification. Rather than follow the Vedic injunctions for simultaneously satisfying their senses and gradually elevating themselves, the conditioned souls reject the actual purpose of such apparently materialistic ceremonies and simply become more and more degraded in the ignorance of the bodily concept of life. Thus they fall down altogether from the varṇÄÅ›rama system and, taking birth in violent non-Vedic societies, foolishly presume the small fragments of universal religious principles prevalent there to be the exclusive religion of the soul. As a result, they fall into fanaticism, embracing merely sectarian, dogmatic views of religion. Such unfortunate persons are completely out of touch with their own eternal function in life and consider things to be vastly different than they are in reality.