Varṇāśrama Saṁskāras, Upanayana Windows, Brahmacārin Ācāra, and Anadhyāya Prohibitions
कुर्यात्प्रतिदिनं वर्णीं ब्रह्मयज्ञं च तर्पणम् । अग्निकार्यपरित्यागी पतितः प्रोच्यते बुधैः ॥ २७ ॥
kuryātpratidinaṃ varṇīṃ brahmayajñaṃ ca tarpaṇam | agnikāryaparityāgī patitaḥ procyate budhaiḥ || 27 ||
Un brahmacārin doit accomplir chaque jour la récitation du Veda, le Brahma-yajña et les offrandes de tarpaṇa. Celui qui abandonne les devoirs rituels du feu prescrits est proclamé par les sages comme un être déchu.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
It frames daily Vedic discipline as a safeguard of dharma: consistent Veda-recitation (Brahma-yajña) and tarpaṇa uphold sacred continuity, while neglect of fire-duties is treated as a serious fall from ordained conduct.
Though stated in ritual terms, it supports bhakti by insisting on daily sacred remembrance and reverence—regular study and offerings cultivate steadiness, purity, and accountability that traditionally support devotion to the Divine.
It highlights applied ritual discipline (kalpa/śrauta-smārta procedure) centered on nitya-karma—Brahma-yajña (daily svādhyāya) and agni-kārya—showing how prescribed rites structure a student’s life.