The Description of the Worship of Rāma and Others
Rāmādi-pūjā-vidhāna
नष्टराज्याप्तये मंत्रं जपेल्लक्षं समाहितः । सोऽचिरान्नष्टराज्यं स्वं प्राप्नोत्येव न संशयः ॥ १५२ ॥
naṣṭarājyāptaye maṃtraṃ japellakṣaṃ samāhitaḥ | so'cirānnaṣṭarājyaṃ svaṃ prāpnotyeva na saṃśayaḥ || 152 ||
Upang mabawi ang nawalang kaharian, dapat niyang bigkasin ang mantra nang isang daang libong ulit nang may nakatuong isip. Di magtatagal, tiyak na makakamtan niya muli ang sariling nawalang kaharian—walang pag-aalinlangan.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a technical/prayoga context of mantra-japa)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It emphasizes mantra-sādhana as a disciplined, count-based practice: concentrated japa (lakṣa-saṅkhyā) is presented as a reliable means to restore what has been lost, showing the Purana’s pragmatic approach to spiritual power (siddhi) through focused mind and repetition.
While the verse is goal-oriented (recovering a kingdom), it still highlights a bhakti-aligned discipline: steady remembrance through japa with samāhita-citta (one-pointed devotion/attention), where faith and consistency are central to efficacy.
A practical prayoga principle is taught: fixed japa-saṅkhyā (lakṣa) and mental concentration (samādhāna) as procedural requirements—reflecting technical ritual method rather than philosophy alone.