Śeṣoditya-Sūrya-nyāsa, Soma-sādhana, Graha-pūjā, and Bhauma-vrata-vidhi
शुक्रकेतुयुता ह्येते पूज्याः पत्रग्रगाग्रहाः । रक्तारुणश्वेतनीलपीतधूम्रसिताऽसिताः ॥ ६२ ॥
śukraketuyutā hyete pūjyāḥ patragragāgrahāḥ | raktāruṇaśvetanīlapītadhūmrasitā'sitāḥ || 62 ||
These grahas, together with Śukra (Venus) and Ketu, are indeed to be worshipped—grahas that move along their appointed paths; their hues are red, tawny, white, blue, yellow, smoky, pale, and dark.
Sanatkumara (in dialogue with Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It frames the grahas (including Venus and Ketu) as venerable cosmic powers whose observable qualities—such as distinct colors—reflect an ordered dharmic cosmos and support ritual harmony when respected.
While technical (Jyotiṣa-oriented), it aligns with devotional practice by treating cosmic forces as worthy of reverent worship, encouraging disciplined, sattvic observance rather than fear—integrating devotion with right ritual understanding.
Jyotiṣa Vedāṅga: identifying grahas through traditional markers like color and classifying them for worship/propitiation, a foundation used in muhurta (electional timing) and remedial rites in Narada Purana-style practice.
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