गृहस्थस्य सदाचारः: शौच, तर্পण, वैश्वदेव, अतिथिधर्म, भोजन-विधि, संध्योपासन, ऋतु-धर्मः
उपतिष्ठन्ति ये संध्यां न पूर्वां न च पश्चिमाम् व्रजन्ति ते दुरात्मानस् तामिस्रं नरकं नृप
upatiṣṭhanti ye saṃdhyāṃ na pūrvāṃ na ca paścimām vrajanti te durātmānas tāmisraṃ narakaṃ nṛpa
ໂອ້ ພະຣາຊາ, ຜູ້ມີໃຈຊົ່ວທີ່ບໍ່ປະກອບສັນທະຍາທັງຍາມເຊົ້າແລະຍາມແລງ—ລະເລີຍທັງສອງ—ຈະໄປສູ່ນະລົກຕາມິສຣະ (Tāmisra) ອັນມືດບອດ.
Sage Parāśara (in discourse, addressing a kingly addressee within the teaching)
This verse treats Sandhyā as a foundational daily duty; neglecting both dawn and dusk worship is presented as a serious breach of dharma with severe karmic consequences.
Parāśara frames omission of obligatory practices as moral and spiritual decline (durātmānaḥ), leading to specific post-death outcomes such as Tāmisra, emphasizing karma’s governance of cosmic justice.
Even when Vishnu is not named, the teaching presumes a Vishnu-governed moral cosmos where dharma sustains order; daily rites align the individual with that supreme, sustaining reality.