Prāyaścitta for Mahāpātakas and the Sin-destroying Power of Viṣṇu-smaraṇa
द्वादशाहेतु संसर्गे महासांतपनं स्मृतम् । संगंकृत्वार्द्धमासं तु द्वादशाहमुपावसेत् ॥ ७३ ॥
dvādaśāhetu saṃsarge mahāsāṃtapanaṃ smṛtam | saṃgaṃkṛtvārddhamāsaṃ tu dvādaśāhamupāvaset || 73 ||
Pour un contact qui dure douze jours, l’expiation appelée Mahā-sāntapana est enseignée. Après avoir suivi la discipline prescrite durant une demi-lune, qu’on observe ensuite un jeûne de douze jours.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a dharma–prāyaścitta context)
Vrata: Mahā-sāṃtapana
Primary Rasa: shanta (peace)
Secondary Rasa: vira (heroic)
It frames purification as a structured, time-bound discipline: when impurity is linked to prolonged contact, the text prescribes a correspondingly rigorous prāyaścitta (Mahā-sāntapana) culminating in sustained upavāsa to restore ritual and inner clarity.
While primarily legal-ritual in tone, it supports bhakti indirectly by emphasizing self-restraint (niyama) and purification—conditions traditionally considered supportive for steady remembrance and worship of the Divine.
Kalpa (ritual procedure) is implied: the verse gives a rule-based prāyaścitta sequence (a defined regimen plus a twelve-day fast) keyed to a measurable condition (twelve-day saṃsarga).