Graha–Ketu–Utpāta Lakṣaṇas: Solar/Lunar Omens, Comets, Eclipses, and Calendar Rules
दिव्यांतरिक्षा भौमास्ते शुभाशुभफलप्रदाः । यज्ञध्वजास्त्रभवनरक्षवृद्धिंगजोपमाः ॥ ९३ ॥
divyāṃtarikṣā bhaumāste śubhāśubhaphalapradāḥ | yajñadhvajāstrabhavanarakṣavṛddhiṃgajopamāḥ || 93 ||
Ces signes peuvent être célestes, atmosphériques ou terrestres ; ils donnent des fruits fastes ou néfastes. Puissants tels des éléphants, ils accroissent la protection et la prospérité des yajña, des étendards, des armes et des demeures.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It frames omens as morally consequential indicators—arising in heaven, the atmosphere, or on earth—and teaches that their effects can support or obstruct dharmic life, especially the stability of ritual and social order.
By implying that worldly conditions around yajña and household life fluctuate through auspicious/inauspicious signs, it nudges the devotee to steadiness—performing worship and dharma with discernment rather than fear, keeping devotion anchored beyond changing outcomes.
It points to Jyotiṣa-style classification of signs (celestial/atmospheric/terrestrial) used to judge timing and outcomes for rites (yajña) and protection of life-assets—an applied omen-reading framework within Vedic ritual culture.