The Procedure for Offering Piṇḍa (Funerary Rice-balls) — Gayā-māhātmya
ॐ नमोऽस्तु भानवे भत्रैसोमभौमज्ञरूपिणे । जीवभार्गवशनैश्चरराहुकेतुस्वलरूपिणे ॥ ७२ ॥
oṃ namo'stu bhānave bhatraisomabhaumajñarūpiṇe | jīvabhārgavaśanaiścararāhuketusvalarūpiṇe || 72 ||
โอม—ขอนอบน้อมแด่ภานุคือพระอาทิตย์ ผู้ปรากฏเป็นพระโสม พระภौม และพระพุธในรูปอันเป็นมงคล; และผู้มีสภาวะเป็นพระพฤหัส พระศุกร์ พระเสาร์ ราหู และเกตุด้วยตนเอง۔
Narada (in a litany of salutations within the Uttara-Bhaga narrative)
Vrata: none
Rasa: {"primary_rasa":"bhakti","secondary_rasa":"adbhuta","emotional_journey":"Begins with mantra-like surrender (oṃ namo’stu), expands into wonder at the Sun’s many planetary manifestations, and rests in reverent cosmic unity."}
It presents the Sun as the unifying divine principle behind the nine planetary powers (Navagraha), teaching that cosmic influences are ultimately expressions of one sacred order worthy of reverence.
Bhakti is expressed through namaskāra (salutation) and seeing one divine reality operating through many forms—here, honoring Sūrya while respectfully acknowledging the grahas as his manifested powers.
Jyotiṣa (Vedāṅga astrology): the verse names the Navagrahas using traditional Sanskrit epithets (Jīva, Bhārgava, Śanaiścara, Rāhu, Ketu), supporting graha-identification used in ritual timing and graha-śānti practices.