The Nakshatra-Purusha Vrata: Worship of Vishnu’s Body as the Constellations
कुष्ठरोगाभिभूतश्च यं समाराघ्य वै भृगुः आरोग्यमतुलं प्राप संतानमपि चाक्षयम्
kuṣṭharogābhibhūtaśca yaṃ samārāghya vai bhṛguḥ ārogyamatulaṃ prāpa saṃtānamapi cākṣayam
And Bhṛgu, afflicted by the disease of leprosy, having duly worshipped Him, obtained incomparable health—and also imperishable progeny.
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Kuṣṭha often functions as a paradigmatic ‘hard-to-cure’ affliction, sometimes linked with prior wrongdoing. Curing it through worship underscores the tirtha’s extraordinary purificatory power and the deity’s compassion.
It indicates not merely having children, but the stability and continuity of one’s lineage—offspring who survive, prosper, and maintain the family line—presented as a major worldly boon alongside health.
The verse frames the result as a direct fruit of ‘samārādhana’ (proper worship). In Mahātmya rhetoric, devotion at the sacred site is the decisive cause, even if in lived practice it could accompany vows, bathing, fasting, and other observances.