मासमेकं नरः स्नात्वा प्रयागे नियतेंद्रियः । मुच्यते सर्वपापेभ्यो यथा दृष्टं स्वयंभुवा ॥ ४६ ॥
māsamekaṃ naraḥ snātvā prayāge niyateṃdriyaḥ | mucyate sarvapāpebhyo yathā dṛṣṭaṃ svayaṃbhuvā || 46 ||
Quem se banha em Prayāga por um mês inteiro, com os sentidos refreados, é libertado de todos os pecados — assim como o próprio Svayambhū (Brahmā) viu e confirmou.
Narada (teaching in the Uttara-Bhaga tirtha-mahatmya context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It elevates Prayāga-snānā as a powerful tirtha-prayoga: a month-long disciplined bath at the confluence is said to destroy accumulated pāpa (sin), with the authority of Brahmā (Svayambhū) cited to validate the result.
Though it speaks in the idiom of tirtha and snāna, the key condition is niyatendriyatā (sense-restraint), implying inner devotion and purity alongside outer ritual—an approach consistent with Narada Purana’s emphasis on sincere, disciplined spiritual practice.
It highlights ritual discipline (kalpa-oriented practice): a defined duration (one month), a prescribed act (snāna at a specific tirtha), and an inner qualification (indriya-nigraha), reflecting how vows and observances are structured in Dharma and ritual procedure.