Jyotiṣa-saṅgraha: Varga-vibhāga, Bala-nirṇaya, Garbha-phala, Āyuḥ-gaṇanā
रविशुक्रारराह्वर्केन्दुविदीज्या दिगीश्वराः । क्षीणेंद्वर्काररविजाः पापा पापयुतो बुधः ॥ १७ ॥
raviśukrārarāhvarkenduvidījyā digīśvarāḥ | kṣīṇeṃdvarkāraravijāḥ pāpā pāpayuto budhaḥ || 17 ||
الشمس والزهرة والمريخ وراهُو والقمر وعطارد والمشتري وأرباب الجهات تُعَدّ آلهةً حاكمة. فإذا كان القمر في نقصان، وإذا اشتركَت الشمسُ والمريخُ وزحلُ كان ذلك نذيرَ شؤم؛ وعطاردُ إذا اقترنَ بنحسٍ صار هو أيضًا غيرَ ميمون.
Sanatkumara (in dialogue with Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
It frames Jyotiṣa as a dharmic diagnostic tool: planetary conditions (like a waning Moon or malefic associations) signal periods of greater karmic friction, prompting increased restraint, prayer, and corrective dharma rather than fatalism.
By identifying inauspicious configurations, the verse implicitly encourages turning to steady sādhana—especially remembrance and worship of the Lord—so that the mind remains anchored in bhakti even when external or temporal conditions are unfavorable.
Jyotiṣa (a Vedāṅga) is highlighted: the verse notes the waning Moon (kṣīṇendu) and the principle that Mercury (Budha) becomes functionally malefic when conjoined with a malefic (pāpa-yuta), a key rule used in electional and predictive astrology.