Veṅkaṭācala Māhātmya: Bhakti-Lakṣaṇa, Nārasiṁha-tīrtha, and the Secret Darśana-Vidhi of Śrīnivāsa
पीठस्योर्ध्वं त्वीशकोणे च देवि ऐश्वर्याणामधिपं चेन्द्रदेवम् / पीठस्य पूर्वे प्रणमेन्नैरृतिं च अर्याम्णानामधिपं चात्र देवि
pīṭhasyordhvaṃ tvīśakoṇe ca devi aiśvaryāṇāmadhipaṃ cendradevam / pīṭhasya pūrve praṇamennairṛtiṃ ca aryāmṇānāmadhipaṃ cātra devi
O Göttin, oberhalb des Pīṭha, im nordöstlichen Winkel (Īśāna), soll man sich vor Indra-deva verneigen, dem Herrn des Aiśvarya — Wohlstand und souveräne Macht. Und an der Ostseite des Pīṭha, o Devī, soll man auch Nairṛti sowie dem Herrn der Aryaman (der ehrwürdigen Ahnen-/Götterklasse) hier Namaskāra darbringen.
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra; the verse itself addresses 'Devi' as part of the ritual instruction style)
Concept: Prosperity and authority are to be approached through reverence and right placement within dharmic order; honoring presiding powers prevents imbalance in the pursuit of aiśvarya.
Vedantic Theme: Aiśvarya as subordinate to Dharma; integration of worldly success with ethical-spiritual alignment.
Application: Seek prosperity with humility and safeguards: pair ambition with ethical commitments, gratitude, and respect for tradition/elders; in ritual, honor the prescribed guardians of directions.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: ritual space (corner and side placements around altar)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.24 (directional deities and principles around the pīṭha)
This verse shows that specific deities are honored at specific directions around the pīṭha to establish protection, order, and auspiciousness before performing rites connected with subtle-body and post-death observances.
By mapping guardians like Indra and Nairṛti to directions, the text frames ritual space as safeguarded—supporting correct performance of śrāddha/related rites that are said to aid the preta’s stability and onward journey.
When performing ancestral rites or prayer at home/temple, keep a clean, oriented altar space and mentally honor protective forces in the directions—cultivating discipline, reverence, and ethical steadiness (dharma).