Viśokā Dvādaśī Vow, Guḍa-Dhenū (Jaggery-Cow) Gift, and Śaila-Dāna (Mountain-Charity) Rites
त एव पूजने मंत्रास्त एवोपस्कराः स्मृताः । ग्रहाणां लोकपालानां ब्रह्मादीनां च सर्वतः
ta eva pūjane maṃtrāsta evopaskarāḥ smṛtāḥ | grahāṇāṃ lokapālānāṃ brahmādīnāṃ ca sarvataḥ
Esas mismas (cosas) son tenidas por mantras de adoración, y esas mismas (cosas) son recordadas como los implementos rituales requeridos—en todas partes—para los planetas, los guardianes de los mundos y para Brahmā y las demás deidades.
Unspecified (narrative voice within Sṛṣṭikhaṇḍa context)
Concept: Ritual efficacy depends on correct correspondences: the very offerings/implements constitute the operative ‘mantra’ and ‘upaskara’ across diverse deities, emphasizing unity of worship-grammar.
Application: In daily worship, prioritize sincerity and correct, simple essentials; understand that disciplined consistency can be more powerful than excessive complexity.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A ritual diagram spreads across a clean altar: identical offerings—flowers, lamps, water pots, grains—are arranged in repeating patterns before nine grahas, eight lokapālas, and Brahmā at the center, suggesting one grammar of worship. A priest points to the items as if teaching that these very objects function as ‘mantra’ and ‘implement,’ while the deities appear as subtle, translucent presences above their stations.","primary_figures":["Priest/ācārya","Navagrahas (symbolic)","Lokapālas (symbolic)","Brahmā (symbolic)"],"setting":"Temple mandapa with a large yantra-like floor design, rows of offering plates, incense smoke, and a teaching circle of students.","lighting_mood":"temple lamp-lit","color_palette":["smoke gray","ghee-lamp gold","copper brown","white jasmine","indigo"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: symmetrical mandapa scene with gold leaf accents, central Brahmā icon, surrounding navagraha and lokapāla panels, repeated pūjā items (kalasha, lamps, flowers, grains) rendered with embossed gold, priest instructing students, rich reds/greens and ornate borders.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: refined instructional scene, delicate altar arrangement with repeating offerings, subtle translucent deity forms above, cool palette with warm lamp highlights, fine linework on vessels and textiles, calm scholarly mood.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines and flat pigments, iconic navagraha row and lokapāla figures, repeated ritual implements as patterned motifs, strong red/yellow/green with black borders, temple-wall didactic clarity.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: decorative symmetry with floral borders, repeated lamp and lotus motifs, central Brahmā medallion, surrounding graha symbols, deep blue ground with gold highlights, intricate textile patterning emphasizing ritual order."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"meditative","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["steady bell pulse","incense crackle","soft student murmurs","tanpura drone","brief silences"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: मंत्रास्त → मन्त्राः; त एवोपस्कराः → ते एव उपस्कराः; ब्रह्मादीनां → ब्रह्म-आदीनाम्
It states that the same set of mantras and the same ritual requisites are applicable in worship directed to various cosmic powers—planets (grahas), world-guardians (lokapālas), and major deities such as Brahmā.
Lokapālas are the guardians of the directions/worlds (often identified with the Dikpālas), deities entrusted with cosmic protection and order.
It reflects an integrative purāṇic ritual worldview in which diverse deities and cosmic forces are approached through standardized forms of pūjā, emphasizing continuity of sacred practice across different objects of worship.