सदाचार-नियमाः: शील, संयम, संग-निषेध, शुचिता, वाणी-नीति, परोपकारः
न स्नायान् न स्वपेन् नग्नो न चैवोपस्पृशेद् बुधः मुक्तकच्छश् च नाचामेद् देवाद्यर्चां च वर्जयेत्
na snāyān na svapen nagno na caivopaspṛśed budhaḥ muktakacchaś ca nācāmed devādyarcāṃ ca varjayet
બુદ્ધિમાન મનુષ્યે નગ્ન થઈને સ્નાન ન કરવું, ન સૂવું કે આચમન ન કરવું. વસ્ત્ર શિથિલ હોય ત્યારે પણ દેવપૂજા અને આચમનનો ત્યાગ કરવો.
Sage Parāśara (in instruction to Maitreya)
Speaker: Parasara
Topic: Rules of purity for bathing, sleep, ācāmana, and worship
Teaching: Ethical
Quality: ritual-ethical and precise
Concept: External decorum and ritual purity are to be maintained so that worship and remembrance of Hari remain steady and undistracted.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma
Application: Approach prayer/ritual with cleanliness and respectful attire; treat sacred spaces and practices with mindful reverence.
Vishishtadvaita: Embodied, material acts (ācāra, śauca) are meaningful auxiliaries to devotion, aligning the body (prakāra) with the Lord whom it serves (śeṣin).
Vishnu Form: Hari
Bhakti Type: Shanta
This verse treats bodily decorum as part of śauca (purity): certain actions—bathing, sleeping, ācāmana, and worship—are to be done with proper dress and restraint so that sacred acts are approached with reverence and steadiness.
Parāśara frames purity as practical discipline: avoid sacred touch, ācāmana, and deity-worship when unclothed or improperly dressed, indicating that correct external conduct safeguards the sanctity of rites.
Even when the verse speaks of conduct, its purpose is devotional fitness: orderly purity supports focused arcā and dharma, which in the Vishnu Purana ultimately orient the practitioner toward Viṣṇu as the supreme sustaining reality.