The Caturmasya Observances and the Rite of Vishnu’s Sleep (Aśūnya-Śayana) and Shiva’s Monthly Vows
जलकुम्भान् सनैवेद्यान् ब्राह्मणाय निवेदयेत् सोपवीतान् सहान्नाद्यांस्तच्चित्तैस्तत्परायणैः
jalakumbhān sanaivedyān brāhmaṇāya nivedayet sopavītān sahānnādyāṃstaccittaistatparāyaṇaiḥ
On doit offrir à un brāhmaṇa des pots d’eau avec le naivedya (offrande de nourriture) ; et donner aussi l’upavīta (cordon sacré), avec des grains et d’autres aliments—en agissant l’esprit fixé sur Lui et voué à Lui seul.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "vira", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Ritual piety is completed by generosity: giving essentials (water, food, sacred thread) to a worthy recipient is framed as an extension of worship, and the donor’s intention (taccitta, tatparāyaṇa) is emphasized as ethically decisive.
This is dharma/ācāra content (vrata-dāna-vidhi) embedded within Purāṇic discourse, not a cosmological genealogy segment (sarga/vamśa). For cataloging, classify under ‘dharma—dāna and ritual procedure’.
Water-pot gifting symbolizes sustaining life and purity; upavīta symbolizes Vedic order and sacred commitment. The verse links external charity to internal devotion, implying that worship must overflow into social dharma.