Māheśvara-pūjā-vidhi: Nyāsa, Maṇḍala-āvāhana, Kalā-salutations, and Upacāra Worship
तत उद्वर्तनं स्नानं सुगन्धं चानुलेपनम् / वस्त्रालं कारभोगांश्च ह्यङ्गन्यासं च धूपकम्
tata udvartanaṃ snānaṃ sugandhaṃ cānulepanam / vastrālaṃ kārabhogāṃśca hyaṅganyāsaṃ ca dhūpakam
ثم يُتبع ذلك بدلك الجسد بمساحيق طيّبة الرائحة، والاغتسال، وتطييب البدن بالعطر والأدهان، وتقديم الثياب والحُليّ (وسائر أسباب النعيم)، مع تقديس الأعضاء بـ(أَنْغا-نياسا) وتقديم البخور.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vainateya)
Concept: Upacāra-bhakti: honoring the deity through bodily purification, fragrance, offerings, and aṅga-nyāsa as embodied devotion.
Vedantic Theme: Saguṇa-upāsanā as a support for citta-śuddhi (purification of mind) and steadiness in devotion.
Application: Adopt a simple sequence: cleanse (snāna), apply minimal fragrance, offer clean cloth/flowers/incense, and perform a brief aṅga-nyāsa or nyāsa-like mindful placement of attention before japa.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: ritual-space (gṛha/mandira)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.40.17-18 (continuation of upacāras); Garuda Purana 1.40.19 (mūla-mantra-centered worship)
This verse presents them as sequential acts of purification and respectful preparation—cleansing, scenting, and anointing—before completing a ritual offering or worship.
It does not directly describe the soul’s journey; instead, it outlines ritual disciplines (purification, nyāsa, dhūpa) that support dharma and sanctity in religious practice, which the Garuda Purana links broadly to auspicious outcomes.
Maintain cleanliness and intentionality in worship: bathe, keep the space fragrant and orderly, and perform prayers/mantra with mindful bodily awareness (nyāsa-like focus), ending with incense or a symbolic offering.