The Caturmasya Observances and the Rite of Vishnu’s Sleep (Aśūnya-Śayana) and Shiva’s Monthly Vows
नारद उवाच/ कथयस्व कुरादीनां शयने विधिमुत्तमम् सर्वमनुक्रमेणैव पुरस्कृत्य जनार्दनम्
nārada uvāca/ kathayasva kurādīnāṃ śayane vidhimuttamam sarvamanukrameṇaiva puraskṛtya janārdanam
Nārada dit : «Expose-moi la procédure excellente du rite du “sommeil” (śayana), en commençant par Kura et les autres lieux, en expliquant tout selon l’ordre, après avoir d’abord invoqué (placé au premier rang) Janārdana.»
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Ritual discipline is framed as ordered knowledge (anukrama) anchored in devotion: one begins by placing the deity (Janārdana) foremost, implying that correct intention and divine orientation govern practice.
This passage aligns best with ācāra/dharma material (ritual observance) rather than the five classic lakṣaṇas; within Purāṇic organization it functions as vrata-vidhi instruction, adjacent to dharma/vaṃśānucarita layers but not itself genealogical or cosmogonic.
‘Puraskṛtya Janārdanam’ symbolizes the primacy of the divine in all undertakings: the ‘sleep’ of Hari is not absence but a sacred calendrical mode (Caturmāsya) in which devotees align time, body, and worship.