Sadācāra–Varṇa-lakṣaṇa and Prātaḥkṛtya
Right Conduct, Social Typologies, and Morning Purification
ईषत्स्पर्शे च दौः स्वास्थ्ये राजराष्ट्रभयेऽपि च । अत्यागतिकाले च मंत्रस्नानं समाचरेत्
īṣatsparśe ca dauḥ svāsthye rājarāṣṭrabhaye'pi ca | atyāgatikāle ca maṃtrasnānaṃ samācaret
عند حصول تماسّ يسير يورث عدم الطهارة، وعند اعتلال الصحة، وعند الخوف من الملك أو من الدولة، وكذلك عند دنوّ الخطر—ينبغي أن يُمارَس على الوجه اللائق «اغتسال المانترا» (مانترا-سنانا)، أي التطهير المصحوب بمانترات شيفا.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Bhairava
Significance: Mantra-snāna is presented as a portable protective rite in crisis; it preserves dharmic stability and readiness for Śiva’s refuge when external supports fail.
Shakti Form: Durgā
Role: protective
It teaches that in moments of impurity, weakness, or fear, a devotee should return to Shiva through mantra-assisted purification, restoring inner and outer śuddhi so worship and remembrance remain steady.
The verse supports Saguna Shiva worship by prescribing a practical preparatory rite—mantra-snāna—so the devotee approaches the Linga with purity, devotion, and ritual fitness, especially during distress.
It recommends mantra-snāna: bathing (or ritual cleansing) while reciting Shiva-mantras such as the Panchākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) as a protective and purificatory practice during impurity, illness, or danger.