Ācāra-Nirṇaya: Varṇa-Āśrama Dharma, Śauca, Snāna, Sandhyā, Japa, Tarpaṇa, and Gṛhastha-Dinacaryā
ब्रह्मा वै गार्हपत्याग्निर्दक्षणाग्निस्त्रिलोचनः / विष्णुराहवनीयाग्निः कुमारः सत्य उच्यते
brahmā vai gārhapatyāgnirdakṣaṇāgnistrilocanaḥ / viṣṇurāhavanīyāgniḥ kumāraḥ satya ucyate
برہما ہی گارھپتیہ آگنی ہیں؛ تری لوچن (شیو) دکشن آگنی ہیں؛ وشنو آہونِیَہ آگنی ہیں؛ اور کُمار (اسکند) کو ‘سَتْیَ’ کہا گیا ہے۔
Lord Vishnu (teaching Garuda)
Concept: Deity-immanence in ritual: Brahmā/Śiva/Viṣṇu are present as the sacred fires; truth is affirmed through Kumāra.
Vedantic Theme: Saguna-brahman worship through symbols (pratīka) leading to purification; unity-in-diversity—one sacred reality approached via multiple divine forms.
Application: Perform homa with devotional recognition that the fire is not mere element but a divine presence; cultivate reverence and ethical truthfulness (satya) alongside ritual.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: ritual-cosmos (altar as microcosm)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.213.64-65 (homa performance and agency)
This verse frames the three ritual fires as divine embodiments—Brahmā, Śiva, and Viṣṇu—teaching that maintaining and honoring yajña fires is a form of honoring the cosmic order (dharma) itself.
Indirectly, it grounds after-death teaching in ritual dharma: correct sacrificial order and truthfulness uphold merit (puṇya), which the Garuda Purana repeatedly links to auspicious post-mortem outcomes.
Treat daily duties and worship as sacred—keep ritual purity where applicable, offer actions as “oblations” to the Divine, and prioritize satya (truth) as a guiding discipline.