Snātaka and Gṛhastha-Dharma: Conduct, Marriage Norms, Daily Rites, and Liberating Virtues
संध्यास्नानपरो नित्यं ब्रह्मयज्ञुपरायणः / अनसूयी मृदुर्दान्तो गृहस्थः प्रेत्य वर्धते
saṃdhyāsnānaparo nityaṃ brahmayajñuparāyaṇaḥ / anasūyī mṛdurdānto gṛhasthaḥ pretya vardhate
எப்போதும் ஸந்த்யா அனுஷ்டானமும் ஸ்நானமும் செய்து, பிரஹ்மயஜ்ஞம் (வேதாத்யயனம்-ஸ்வாத்யாயம்) உறுதியாகக் கடைப்பிடித்து, பொறாமையற்ற, மென்மையான, தமக்கையுடைய இல்லறத்தான் மரணத்திற்குப் பின் மேன்மை பெறுவான்।
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) instructing on dharma within the Kurma Purana’s householder teachings
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Indirectly, it points to the Atman-oriented path by emphasizing purity (snāna), disciplined daily practice (Sandhyā), and Brahma-yajña (sacred study), which refine the mind for Self-knowledge rather than mere ritualism.
Sandhyā practice functions as a daily discipline of japa, contemplation, and ritual purification; coupled with self-restraint (dānta) and non-envy (anasūyā), it forms the ethical and mental groundwork that supports higher Yoga, including the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva-Vaishnava synthesis of devotion and inner control.
Though not naming Shiva directly, the verse reflects the Purana’s integrative dharma-yoga ethos: disciplined conduct and sacred study are shared foundations across Shaiva and Vaishnava paths, preparing the seeker for realization of the one Supreme beyond sectarian division.