Śeṣoditya-Sūrya-nyāsa, Soma-sādhana, Graha-pūjā, and Bhauma-vrata-vidhi
स्वस्वनामादिवर्णाद्याः शक्तयोऽर्च्या विदिक्षु च । उषां प्रज्ञां प्रभां संध्यां ततो ब्रह्मादिकान्यजेत् ॥ ३१ ॥
svasvanāmādivarṇādyāḥ śaktayo'rcyā vidikṣu ca | uṣāṃ prajñāṃ prabhāṃ saṃdhyāṃ tato brahmādikānyajet || 31 ||
В промежуточных направлениях (vidik) также следует почитать шакти, начинающиеся с первых слогов их собственных имён. Затем надлежит поклониться Уше (Рассвету), Праджне (Мудрости), Прабхе (Сиянию) и Сандхье (Сумеркам); после чего — Брахме и прочим божествам в должном порядке.
Sanatkumara (in dialogue with Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It teaches that worship should be structured and complete: honoring subtle powers (Śaktis) tied to directions and mantra-syllables, then venerating time-junction divinities (dawn/twilight) before proceeding to higher deities like Brahmā—reflecting an ordered ascent from subtle forces to cosmic principles.
Bhakti here is expressed as disciplined upāsanā: devotion becomes effective when offered with proper sequence, attention to divine manifestations (Śaktis, dawn, twilight), and reverence for the cosmic order rather than random or purely emotional worship.
It reflects ritual science tied to directionality (dik/vidik) and varṇa (syllable/letter) awareness—elements associated with mantra-usage and ordered worship procedure, aligning with Vedāṅga-style precision in rites.