Agnihotra, Seasonal Śrauta Duties, and the Authority of Śruti–Smṛti–Purāṇa
श्रौतस्त्रेताग्निसंबन्धात् स्मार्तः पूर्वं मयोदितः / श्रेयस्करतमः श्रौतस्तस्माच्छ्रौतं समाचरेत्
śrautastretāgnisaṃbandhāt smārtaḥ pūrvaṃ mayoditaḥ / śreyaskaratamaḥ śrautastasmācchrautaṃ samācaret
ສຣາວຕະວິໄນເກືອບກັບໄຟສັກສິດສາມດວງ; ສະມາຣຕະວິໄນນັ້ນ ຂ້ອຍໄດ້ກ່າວໄວ້ກ່ອນແລ້ວ। ເສັ້ນທາງສຣາວຕະເປັນທີ່ເກີດປະໂຫຍດສູງສຸດ; ດັ່ງນັ້ນ ພຶງປະພຶດພິທີສຣາວຕະໃຫ້ຖືກຕ້ອງ।
Lord Kūrma (as narrator-teacher of dharma)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Indirectly: it prioritizes śreyas (highest spiritual welfare) and presents disciplined Vedic action (śrauta-karma) as a purifying support that orients the practitioner toward the highest good, which culminates in Self-realization.
This verse emphasizes karma-discipline rather than a specific meditation technique: maintaining the tretāgni and performing śrauta rites as a regulated sādhana that steadies the mind, purifies intention, and complements later yogic contemplation taught elsewhere in the Kurma Purana.
It reflects the Purana’s synthesis by valuing orthodox Vedic discipline (often shared across Shaiva–Vaishnava traditions) as a common foundation for spiritual ascent; the focus is on śreyas through dharma rather than sectarian opposition.