Dharmopadeśa-Śānti: Rules of Impurity, Expiations, and Ancestor Rites
अनूढ न पृथक्कन्या पिण्डे गोत्रे च सूतके । पाणिग्रहणमन्त्राभ्यां स्वगोत्राद्भ्रश्यते ततः ॥ ८१ ॥
anūḍha na pṛthakkanyā piṇḍe gotre ca sūtake | pāṇigrahaṇamantrābhyāṃ svagotrādbhraśyate tataḥ || 81 ||
Una muchacha no casada no se considera separada de la familia paterna en lo relativo al piṇḍa, al gotra y al sūtaka (impureza ritual). Pero cuando el rito matrimonial se completa mediante los mantras del pāṇigrahaṇa (toma de la mano), entonces se aparta de su propio gotra (paterno).
Sanatkumara (in instruction to Narada on Dharma and ritual law)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: none
It defines how samskāra (the marriage rite) formally shifts a woman’s ritual identity—clarifying duties related to lineage, ancestral offerings, and impurity observances as part of living dharma in society.
While not directly teaching bhakti, it supports bhakti-life by establishing correct dharmic order in the gṛhastha stage, where household rites and purity rules help sustain disciplined worship and sacred duties.
Kalpa (ritual procedure) is implied: the pāṇigrahaṇa mantras and their legal-ritual effect on gotra, piṇḍa obligations, and sūtaka observance.