Gṛhastha-praveśa: Vivāha-bheda, Ācāra-śauca, Śrāddha-kāla, and Vaiṣṇava-lakṣaṇa
श्रोत्रिये गृहमायाते ग्रहणे चंद्रसूर्योः । पुण्यक्षेत्रेषु तीर्थेषु गृही श्राद्धं समाचरेत् ॥ ४२ ॥
śrotriye gṛhamāyāte grahaṇe caṃdrasūryoḥ | puṇyakṣetreṣu tīrtheṣu gṛhī śrāddhaṃ samācaret || 42 ||
Cuando un śrotriya (brāhmaṇa versado en los Vedas) llega al hogar, durante los eclipses de luna o de sol, y al permanecer en regiones sagradas y en tīrthas (lugares de peregrinación), el cabeza de familia debe realizar debidamente el Śrāddha.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a dharma-instruction context)
Vrata: Śrāddha (tīrtha-śrāddha; grahaṇa-śrāddha; atithi/śrotriya-occasion śrāddha)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It marks specific highly meritorious occasions—receiving a śrotriya guest, eclipses, and presence in tīrthas—when śrāddha yields heightened ancestral and dharmic benefit for a householder.
By framing śrāddha as disciplined dharma performed at sacred times and places, it supports bhakti indirectly: purity, gratitude to ancestors, and honoring the learned strengthen sattva and make devotional life steadier.
Kalpa (ritual procedure) and Jyotiṣa (timing)—especially grahaṇa (eclipse) as a ritually significant kāla—are implied as key determinants for when śrāddha should be performed.