Tīrtha-vidhi (Procedure for Holy Places) — Prayāgarāja-māhātmya
यस्येष्टियज्ञेष्वधिकारितास्ति वरं गृहं गृहधर्माश्च सर्वे । एवं गृहस्ताश्रमसंस्थितस्य तीर्थे गतिः पूर्वतरैर्निषिद्धा । सर्वाणि तीर्थान्यपि चाग्निहोत्रतुल्यानि नैवेति वदंति केचित् ॥ २३ ॥
yasyeṣṭiyajñeṣvadhikāritāsti varaṃ gṛhaṃ gṛhadharmāśca sarve | evaṃ gṛhastāśramasaṃsthitasya tīrthe gatiḥ pūrvatarairniṣiddhā | sarvāṇi tīrthānyapi cāgnihotratulyāni naiveti vadaṃti kecit || 23 ||
Para sa may karapatang magsagawa ng mga iṣṭi-yajña, ang buhay-bahay (gṛhastha) ang pinakamainam, kasama ang lahat ng tungkulin ng maybahay. Kaya para sa matatag na nakalagay sa gṛhastha-āśrama, ang pag-alis upang maglakbay sa mga tīrtha ay ipinagbawal ng mga sinauna. May ilan pang nagsasabi na hindi raw tunay na kapantay ng Agnihotra ang lahat ng tīrtha.
Narada (teaching in the Uttara-Bhaga tirtha-context; traditional dialogue frame with Sanatkumara is implied)
Vrata: Agnihotra (nitya rite; not a vrata)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: none
It prioritizes nitya-karma (daily obligatory rites like Agnihotra and gṛhadharma) over optional religious travel, teaching that steadiness in one’s āśrama-dharma is itself a primary spiritual discipline.
By implying that devotion is not only expressed through visiting sacred places; for a householder, faithful performance of prescribed duties and sacrifices can be a direct form of dharmic worship that supports bhakti through discipline and purity.
Ritual competence (Kalpa/Śrauta–Gṛhya practice) is central: it stresses adhikāra (eligibility) and the hierarchy of nitya rites like Agnihotra over kāmya/optional acts such as extensive tīrtha-yātrā.