Solar Rays, Planetary Nourishment, Dhruva-Bondage of the Grahas, and the Lunar Cycle
वरुणो माघमासे तु सूर्यः पूषा तु फल्गुने / चैत्रे मासि भवेदंशो धाता वैशाखतापनः
varuṇo māghamāse tu sūryaḥ pūṣā tu phalgune / caitre māsi bhavedaṃśo dhātā vaiśākhatāpanaḥ
மাঘ மாதத்தில் வருணன் அதிஷ்டாதாவாக இருப்பான்; பால்குணத்தில் சூரியன் பூஷன் ரூபமாக அதிஷ்டானம் செய்கிறான். சைத்ரத்தில் அம்சன் அதிஷ்டாதா; வைசாகத்தில் தாதா ‘தாபன’—வெப்பம் அளிப்பவன்—அதிஷ்டாதாவாகிறான்.
Sūta (narrating the Purāṇic account to the sages, describing the monthly presiding solar deities)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Indirectly: by mapping divine functions to time (months), it presents a cosmos ordered by intelligible powers; in Kurma Purāṇa’s broader theology, such ordered manifestations point back to a single sustaining Reality (Īśvara/Ātman) behind all names and functions.
No specific yoga technique is taught in this verse; its practical use is dharmic observance—choosing proper times for vratas, worship, and discipline, which in the Kurma Purāṇa supports inner purification that complements Pāśupata-style restraint and devotion found elsewhere.
The verse itself is calendrical and solar; however, in the Kurma Purāṇa’s Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis, such deities function as coordinated limbs of one cosmic order under Īśvara—supporting the text’s tendency to harmonize sectarian forms within a unified sacred governance.