Brahmacārin-Dharma: Guru-Sevā, Daily Vedic Study, Gāyatrī-Japa, and Anadhyāya Regulations
गत्वा वनं वा विधिवज्जुहुयाज्जातवेदसम् / अधीयीत सदा नित्यं ब्रह्मनिष्ठः समाहितः
gatvā vanaṃ vā vidhivajjuhuyājjātavedasam / adhīyīta sadā nityaṃ brahmaniṣṭhaḥ samāhitaḥ
وإن مضى إلى الغابة أيضًا، فليُقَدِّم وفق الشريعة القرابين في جاتافيداس (أغني)؛ وليكن دائمًا ساكن القلب مجموع الذهن، ثابتًا في براهمان، مواظبًا على الدراسة المقدسة بلا انقطاع.
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) instructing Indradyumna (didactic discourse on dharma and disciplined practice)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
It points to Brahman-realization as the practitioner’s stable ground: ritual action is upheld, yet the culmination is brahmaniṣṭhā—abidance in the Supreme Reality beyond mere external performance.
The verse emphasizes samādhāna (collectedness) alongside nitya-svādhyāya (daily scriptural recitation/study) and disciplined yajña to Agni—an integrated path where outer nitya-karma supports inner concentration and steadiness.
While not naming Śiva directly, it reflects the Kurma Purana’s synthesis: Vedic fire-ritual and Brahman-abidance are presented as complementary means toward the one Supreme—an approach consistent with the text’s broader Shaiva-Vaishnava non-sectarian theology.