Devapūjā, Vaiśvadeva Offering, and Bali (देवपूजावैश्वदेवबलिः)
बलिं वहिस् तथा दद्यात्सायं प्रातस्तु प्रत्यहं पिण्डनिर्वपणं कुर्यात् प्रातः सायन्न कारयेत्
baliṃ vahis tathā dadyātsāyaṃ prātastu pratyahaṃ piṇḍanirvapaṇaṃ kuryāt prātaḥ sāyanna kārayet
พึงถวายบลีและบูชาอาหุติลงในไฟศักดิ์สิทธิ์ทั้งเวลาเย็นและเวลาเช้า และพึงประกอบพิธีวางปิณฑะเป็นประจำทุกวัน มิให้ทำเพียงเช้า‑เย็นเป็นการทดแทน แต่ให้เป็นนิตย์พิธีโดยตรง
Lord Agni (narrating Agni Purana instructions to Sage Vasiṣṭha)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Dharmashastra","secondary_vidya":"Vrata","practical_application":"Daily household ritual discipline: twice-daily bali and agnihotra-like oblations, plus a distinct daily piṇḍa-nirvapana as a separate nitya-karman rather than a mere morning/evening substitute.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Procedure","entry_title":"Nitya Bali–Havis and Daily Piṇḍa-nirvapana Rule","lookup_keywords":["bali","havis","pinda-nirvapana","pratah-sayam","nitya-karma"],"quick_summary":"Offer bali and fire-oblation both morning and evening; additionally perform piṇḍa-nirvapana every day as its own obligatory observance, not merely folded into the twice-daily routine."}
Concept: Nitya-karman must be performed with correct periodicity; distinct rites are not to be collapsed into convenience-based substitutions.
Application: Maintain a daily schedule separating morning/evening offerings from the daily piṇḍa rite; treat ritual time as a moral discipline (niyama).
Khanda Section: Puja-vidhi (Daily offerings, Bali and Pinda rites)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A householder at a domestic altar offers bali portions and pours havis into the fire at dawn and dusk; nearby, a separate arrangement for daily piṇḍa placement is prepared, emphasizing it as an independent rite.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: gṛhastha in white dhoti near a small homa-kuṇḍa, glowing agni, banana-leaf bali portions, kuśa and vessels arranged symmetrically; warm ochres and reds, temple-like domestic sanctum ambience.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting: central agni with gold-leaf halo, householder offering havis with ladle, ornate vessels, stylized bali plates; rich reds/greens, embossed gold detailing on fire and utensils.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore painting: instructional layout showing morning and evening panels, labeled bali and havis, plus a distinct daily piṇḍa-nirvapana setup; delicate lines, muted palette, clear ritual implements.","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature: intimate courtyard ritual at sunrise/sunset, fine detailing of ladle, fire, offerings; attendants and household setting, naturalistic light gradients, precise textiles."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"instructional","suggested_raga":"Bhairav","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"instructional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: dadyāt+sāyam → dadyātsāyam; prātaḥ+tu → prātastu; sāyam+na → sāyanna (anusvāra/assimilation in recitation).
Related Themes: Agni Purana 263 (Pūjā-vidhi and Śrāddha-vidhi sequence)
It prescribes a daily regimen of offerings: bali (food portions offered ritually) and oblations into the sacred fire (vahni), to be done both morning and evening, along with the daily practice of piṇḍa-nirvapaṇa (setting out offering portions/food-balls).
It exemplifies the Agni Purana’s practical, manual-like coverage of dharma and worship—giving operational details for everyday household/ritual conduct (pujā-vidhi), alongside its many other domains (statecraft, medicine, architecture, poetics).
Regular morning-evening offerings and the daily piṇḍa rite are presented as disciplines of purity and continuity of worship, sustaining ritual order (ṛta/dharma) and accruing merit through consistent, correctly timed observance.