Kṣetra–Kāla–Phala-kramaḥ
Hierarchy of Sacred Place, Time, and Ritual Fruit
अतस्तद्विषशांत्यर्थं स्नानदानजपांश्चरेत् । विषशांत्यर्थकालत्वात्स कालः पुण्यदः स्मृतः
atastadviṣaśāṃtyarthaṃ snānadānajapāṃścaret | viṣaśāṃtyarthakālatvātsa kālaḥ puṇyadaḥ smṛtaḥ
لذلك، من أجل تسكين ذلك السُّمّ، ينبغي أن يُؤدَّى الاغتسال الطقسي، والصدقة، وجَپَا المانترا (ترديدها). ولأن ذلك الوقت مخصّص لتهدئة السُّمّ، فإن تلك الفترة نفسها تُذكَر على أنها مانحة للثواب (puṇya).
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Significance: Frames grahaṇa-kāla as remedial and merit-bearing when used for śānti (pacification) through snāna, dāna, and japa—turning a dangerous liminal time into a grace-opportunity.
Role: nurturing
Offering: naivedya
Cosmic Event: grahaṇa-kāla treated as viṣa-śānti-artha-kāla (time meant for pacification)
It teaches that when a harmful condition (symbolized as “poison”) arises, the Shaiva remedy is purification and re-alignment through snāna (outer-inner cleansing), dāna (selfless release of possessiveness), and japa (turning the mind to Shiva). Such a time becomes merit-producing because it is used for conscious spiritual correction.
Snāna, dāna, and japa are standard supports to Linga-upāsanā: bathing and purity prepare one for Shiva’s worship, charity expresses devotion and humility, and japa (commonly the Pañcākṣarī, “Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) steadies the mind in Saguna Shiva-bhakti, leading toward inner purification.
Perform a purificatory bath, give charitable offerings according to capacity, and do steady mantra-japa—ideally with Shaiva discipline (cleanliness, restraint, and focused remembrance of Shiva).