Daily Duties of Brāhmaṇas: Snāna, Sandhyā, Sūrya-hṛdaya, Japa, Tarpaṇa, and the Pañca-mahāyajñas
गवां हि रजसा प्रोक्तं वायव्यं स्नानमुत्तमम् / यत्तु सातपवर्षेण स्नानं तद् दिव्यमुच्यते
gavāṃ hi rajasā proktaṃ vāyavyaṃ snānamuttamam / yattu sātapavarṣeṇa snānaṃ tad divyamucyate
غبارُ الأبقار يُعلَن أنه أسمى غُسلٍ ‘فايَفْيا’ (المنسوب إلى الريح). وأما الاغتسالُ بالشمس والمطر—أي التعرّض لضياء الشمس ولقطرات المطر—فيُسمّى ‘الغُسل الإلهي’.
Traditional narration (Purāṇic discourse) describing dharma of purification; commonly framed as instruction given within the Kurma Purana’s dialogue setting.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Indirectly, it teaches that external purity (snāna) supports inner purification; in the Kurma Purana’s dharma-yoga framework, such disciplines steady the mind so Self-knowledge can arise without obstruction.
It highlights preparatory discipline (śauca) rather than a posture or mantra: simple, accessible modes of purification—dust-bath (vāyavya) and sun-rain bath (divya)—as supports for vrata, japa, and contemplative practice emphasized across the text’s yoga-dharma teaching.
By focusing on shared dharma (purity, restraint, and yogic readiness) rather than sectarian markers, it reflects the Purana’s integrative approach where Shaiva-Pashupata and Vaishnava devotion converge through common disciplines of purification.