Daily Duties of Brāhmaṇas: Snāna, Sandhyā, Sūrya-hṛdaya, Japa, Tarpaṇa, and the Pañca-mahāyajñas
देवान् ब्रह्मःऋषींश्चैव तर्पयेदक्षतोदकैः / तिलोदकैः पितॄन् भक्त्या स्वसूत्रोक्तविधानतः
devān brahmaḥṛṣīṃścaiva tarpayedakṣatodakaiḥ / tilodakaiḥ pitṝn bhaktyā svasūtroktavidhānataḥ
Qu’il offre le tarpaṇa (libation) aux Deva et aux Ṛṣi brahmaniques avec de l’eau contenant des grains de riz intacts ; et, avec bhakti, qu’il apaise les Ancêtres (pitṛ) par de l’eau mêlée de sésame, exactement selon la règle enseignée dans son propre Gṛhya-sūtra.
Vyasa (Purāṇic narrator instructing dharma-vidhi in the Kurma Purana)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
Indirectly: it frames nitya-karma (daily dharmic duties) as a purifying discipline. Such purification steadies the mind and supports higher knowledge of the Self taught elsewhere in the Kurma Purana, especially in the Ishvara Gita sections.
The verse highlights preparatory discipline rather than a seated technique: devotional tarpana performed by rule (vidhi) and with bhakti. In the Kurma Purana’s yogic framework, this kind of regulated purity and gratitude supports inner concentration and devotion-based yoga.
It does so through synthesis in practice: the Purana emphasizes orthodox dharma (tarpana to devas, ṛṣis, and pitṛs) as a shared foundation for devotion to the Supreme, whether approached through Shaiva or Vaishnava idioms elsewhere in the text.