Rambhā-Tṛtīyā Vrata: annual cycle of Devī worship, offerings, and dāna
कर्पूरादः कृसरदो मल्लिकादन्तकाष्ठकृत् / माघेसुभद्रां कल्हारैर्घृताशो मण्डकप्रदः
karpūrādaḥ kṛsarado mallikādantakāṣṭhakṛt / māghesubhadrāṃ kalhārairghṛtāśo maṇḍakapradaḥ
مَن قدّم الكافور، وتصدّق بطعام الكِرْسَرا (kṛsara) من الأرز المطبوخ، وهيّأ عيدان تنظيف الأسنان من الياسمين، وفي شهر ماغها (Māgha) قدّم عطايا مباركة مع زهور اللوتس الزرقاء (kalhāra)؛ ومَن تناول السمن المصفّى (ghee) وأهدى كعكات الماندَكا (maṇḍaka) الحلوة نال ثوابًا ونتائجَ ميمونة.
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda)
Concept: Merit accrues through timely offerings and dāna—fragrance (karpūra), nourishment (kṛsara, maṇḍaka), and welfare items (dantakāṣṭha)—performed with auspicious intent.
Vedantic Theme: Puṇya as antaḥkaraṇa-śuddhi: sattvic giving and restraint (ghṛtāśa) support inner clarity conducive to bhakti/jñāna.
Application: In Māgha, combine worship with charity: offer food to guests/poor, provide hygiene items, and keep offerings sattvic; treat daily necessities as dharmic gifts.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: household altar/temple setting
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.120 (monthly dāna/vrata prescriptions)
This verse highlights specific purifying gifts—camphor, food, tooth-sticks, lotuses, ghee, and sweets—as concrete acts of dāna that generate auspicious merit (puṇya) when performed with faith, especially in Māgha.
While not describing the after-death journey directly, it supports the Garuda Purana’s broader teaching that righteous acts and ritual charity strengthen one’s merit, which influences post-death wellbeing and spiritual progress.
Practice intentional giving—offer food, simple daily-use necessities, and devotional items in a sacred season (like Māgha), and pair it with purity of conduct and generosity rather than mere display.