The Nakshatra-Purusha Vrata: Worship of Vishnu’s Body as the Constellations
तस्मिन् विपणिवृत्तिस्थः सुधर्माख्यो ऽभवद् वणिक् धनाढ्यो गुणवान् भोगी नानासास्त्रविशारदः
tasmin vipaṇivṛttisthaḥ sudharmākhyo 'bhavad vaṇik dhanāḍhyo guṇavān bhogī nānāsāstraviśāradaḥ
splendor; vidhura: Vidhura (name here functioning as an exemplar recipient of a boon; distinct from the Mahābhārata’s Vidura unless context confirms); agryām: excellent
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "shringara", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Māhātmyas frequently demonstrate that sanctity and liberation-oriented merit are accessible to householders, not only renunciants. A merchant embodies mobility, wealth, and social networks—ideal for illustrating pilgrimage, charity, vows, and the transformative power of a sacred place.
In this context bhogī primarily signals prosperity and the capacity to enjoy lawful comforts. Coupled with guṇavān and śāstra-viśārada, it frames Sudharmā as an exemplary affluent householder rather than a hedonist.
It establishes competence and credibility: even a learned, successful person can require the special grace of a tīrtha (or can become the instrument through which its greatness is revealed). It also anticipates ethical or ritual decision-making grounded in śāstric awareness.