Chapter 61 — द्वारप्रतिष्ठाध्वजारोहाणादिविधिः
Gateway Installation, Flag Hoisting, and Allied Rites
वैराजभूतान्तं ध्यायेत् प्रासादस्य सुरेश्वर ततः पुरुषवत्सर्वं प्रासादं चिन्तयेद् बुधः
vairājabhūtāntaṃ dhyāyet prāsādasya sureśvara tataḥ puruṣavatsarvaṃ prāsādaṃ cintayed budhaḥ
Ô Seigneur des dieux, on doit méditer le prāsāda (temple) comme s’étendant jusqu’au niveau de Vairāja-bhūta; ensuite, le sage doit contempler le temple tout entier comme ayant la forme d’une Personne (Puruṣa).
Lord Agni (traditional Agni Purana narrator) addressing a divine interlocutor styled as Sureśvara; taught for the practitioner/architect-priest (sthapati/ācārya).
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Vastu","secondary_vidya":"Shilpa","practical_application":"Temple visualization (dhyāna-vidhi) for prāsāda design/consecration: mapping the structure to cosmic levels (Vairāja-bhūta) and to Vāstu-Puruṣa (temple as a Person).","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Description","entry_title":"Prāsāda-dhyāna up to Vairāja-bhūta; temple as Puruṣa","lookup_keywords":["prāsāda-lakṣaṇa","Vairāja-bhūta","Vāstu-Puruṣa","temple-visualization","dhyāna-vidhi"],"quick_summary":"Meditate on the temple as extending to the Vairāja level, then contemplate the whole prāsāda as a living Puruṣa—supporting correct proportioning and sacralization."}
Concept: Microcosm–macrocosm identity: built form (prāsāda) mirrors the cosmic Person (Puruṣa/Vairāja), making architecture a contemplative embodiment of metaphysics.
Application: Architects and ritualists use puruṣa-visualization to guide layout, vertical hierarchy, and consecration intent—treating the temple as a living sacred body.
Khanda Section: Vāstu-Śāstra (Prāsāda-Lakṣaṇa & Temple Visualization / Dhyāna-vidhi)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A meditating architect-sage visualizes a towering temple rising through cosmic tiers to the Vairāja level; the temple is overlaid with a translucent human-form diagram (Vāstu-Puruṣa) aligning limbs to architectural parts.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural, monumental prāsāda silhouette with layered tiers, a faint Vāstu-Puruṣa figure superimposed, sage in meditation posture at base, earthy reds/ochres, sacred aura lines.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting, central prāsāda with gold-foil accents, Vāstu-Puruṣa rendered as a luminous figure within/over the temple, ornate framing, devotional grandeur.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore style, technical clarity: temple elevation with a transparent puruṣa-grid overlay, sage pointing/meditating, fine linework and gentle shading for instructional visualization.","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, refined architectural rendering of a temple with cosmic cloud bands indicating ‘Vairāja’ height, scholar-architect with manuscript, subtle superimposed human-form diagram."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"contemplative","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"slow","voice_tone":"contemplative"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: vairājabhūtāntaṃ → vairāja-bhūta-antam; puruṣavatsarvaṃ → puruṣa-vat + sarvam.
Related Themes: Agni Purana 61 (Vāstu-śāstra: prāsāda-lakṣaṇa, dhyāna-vidhi)
It teaches a Vāstu/temple-ritual visualization method: meditate on the temple’s structure up to the Vairāja (cosmic/elemental) scope and then conceptualize the entire prāsāda as Puruṣa (a living cosmic-person form), aligning architecture with sacred cosmology.
It shows the Agni Purana integrating architectural science (Vāstu-śāstra) with contemplative ritual practice (dhyāna) and cosmological doctrine (Virāṭ/Puruṣa), illustrating how the text spans both technical building principles and spiritual sacralization of space.
By visualizing the temple as the cosmic Person, the practitioner sacralizes the building as a divine body, making worship and construction acts harmonize with cosmic order (ṛta), thereby increasing ritual purity and religious merit through correct intention and consecratory contemplation.