Vināyaka-snāna (The Vinayaka Bath) — Obstacle-Removal and Consecratory Bathing Rite
तेन त्वामभिषिञ्चामि पावमान्यः पुनन्तु ते भगवन्ते वरुणो राजा भगं सूर्यो वृहस्पतिः
tena tvāmabhiṣiñcāmi pāvamānyaḥ punantu te bhagavante varuṇo rājā bhagaṃ sūryo vṛhaspatiḥ
ដោយទឹក/ពិធីបុណ្យនោះ ខ្ញុំអភិសេក (លាបទឹកបរិសុទ្ធ) លើអ្នក។ សូមមន្តបាវមានៈ (Pavamāna) ដែលបរិសុទ្ធ ឲ្យបរិសុទ្ធអ្នក។ សូមព្រះវរុណៈ ព្រះរាជា និងភគៈ សូរ្យៈ និងព្រហស្បតិ៍ ក៏បរិសុទ្ធ និងប្រទានពរដល់អ្នកផង។
Lord Agni (as narrator/instructor of ritual procedure)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Mantra","secondary_vidya":"Vrata","practical_application":"Abhiṣeka-mantra in pūjā: anointing with consecrated water while invoking Vedic purifiers and deities for śuddhi and maṅgala.","sutra_style":false}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Mantra","entry_title":"Abhiṣeka with Pavamāna and Varuṇa–Sūrya–Bṛhaspati Benedictions","lookup_keywords":["abhiṣeka","pavamāna","varuṇa","bhaga","bṛhaspati"],"quick_summary":"Use consecrated water to anoint the worshipped person/deity, invoking Pavamāna purification and the blessings of Varuṇa, Bhaga, Sūrya, and Bṛhaspati for ritual and auspicious cleansing."}
Concept: Śuddhi through āpaḥ (waters) and devatā-anugraha as prerequisites for successful worship.
Application: Before/within pūjā, perform abhiṣeka with mantra to establish purity and auspiciousness for subsequent offerings and vows.
Khanda Section: Puja-vidhi (Abhisheka and Vedic Benedictions)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A guru/priest performs abhiṣeka, pouring sanctified water over the head of the worshipped figure while invoking Pavamāna and deities Varuṇa, Bhaga, Sūrya, and Bṛhaspati.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala temple mural style, priest performing abhisheka with kalasha, flowing sacred water, subtle depiction of Varuna with noose, Surya with halo, Brihaspati as sage-guru, warm earthy palette, ornate borders, devotional atmosphere","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting, central abhisheka scene with gold leaf highlights on kalasha and halo, Surya radiant, Varuna regal, Brihaspati as venerable guru, rich reds and greens, temple arch framing","mysore_prompt":"Mysore painting, clean linework showing ritual sequence: kalasha, abhisheka stream, priest hand gestures, small icon panels of Varuna Surya Brihaspati, soft shading, instructional clarity","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, courtly ritual setting with priest anointing, detailed textiles, attendants holding vessels, marginal clouds suggesting deities Varuna Surya Brihaspati, fine brushwork and architectural pavilion"}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"devotional","suggested_raga":"Bhairav","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"devotional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: त्वामभिषिञ्चामि = त्वाम् + अभिषिञ्चामि; पावमान्यः (as written); पुनन्तु ते (no sandhi); भगवन्ते (dative) followed by list of nominatives वरुणः/राजा/सूर्यः/वृहस्पतिः; भगं = भगम् (acc.).
Related Themes: Agni Purana 265 (Pūjā-vidhi: abhiṣeka, rakṣā, snāna-homa)
It teaches the abhiṣeka application: the act of consecration by sprinkling/anointing, accompanied by Pavamāna purificatory formulas and invocations to specific deities (Varuṇa, Bhaga, Sūrya, Bṛhaspati) to sanctify the recipient.
It exemplifies the text’s practical ritual handbook aspect—preserving procedural liturgy (abhisheka), mantra-usage, and deity-specific functions—alongside its many other domains (law, polity, medicine, arts), thereby functioning as an all-in-one compendium.
Abhiṣeka paired with Pavamāna purification is presented as a means of inner and outer cleansing, invoking cosmic order (Varuṇa), fortune (Bhaga), illumination (Sūrya), and sanctified speech/merit (Bṛhaspati) for auspiciousness and removal of impurity.