The Agni Purana

by N. Gangadharan | 1954 | 360,691 words | ISBN-10: 8120803590 | ISBN-13: 9788120803596

This page describes Procedure for bathing prior to a religious rite which is chapter 22 of the English translation of the Agni Purana, one of the eighteen major puranas dealing with all topics concerning ancient Indian culture, tradition and sciences. Containing roughly 15,000 Sanskrit metrical verses, subjects contained in the Agni-Purana include cosmology, philosophy, architecture, iconography, economics, diplomacy, pilgrimage guides, ancient geography, gemology, ayurveda, etc.

Chapter 22 - Procedure for bathing prior to a religious rite

[Sanskrit text for this chapter is available]

Nārada said:

1. I will (now) describe the (mode of) bathing preceding (any religious) act. Having taken a clod of earth accompanied by (meditation on) the man-lion form (of Viṣṇu), and making it into two parts, (one has to do) mental bathing with one part of it.

2. Having immersed (one’s body in waters) and having partaken (three drops of) water and assigning (on the body) with the lion (man-lion) one has to get himself protected. Then one has to do bathing as laid down, being preceded by the control of the breath.

3. Meditating on Lord Hari in one’s heart with the eight-syllabled mantra (Oṃ namo Vāsudevāya, Oṃ namo Nārāyaṇāya or Oṃ namo Narasiṃhāya), the clod of earth (is made) into three parts on the palm and protection in (all) the quarters (is achieved) with the recitation of (the mantra) for the lion (man-lion).

4-7. With the recitation (of the mantra) ofVāsudeva, having mentally resolved the sacred water and having rubbed the body with vedic mantras and having adored the image of deity and having remembered the aghamarṣaṇa (sūkta) which destroys sins) and putting on a cloth, perform the (following) rite. Putting water on the palm, accompanied by mantras and wiping off waters on the palm, controlling with the Nārāyaṇa (mantra), the air is inhaled and water is let off. Then contemplating on Hari, offering waters (of oblation) and reciting the twelve-syllabled (mantra), appeasing all others with devotion commencing in order with the seat of meditation, the mantras upto all the guardian deities of the quarters, the sages, clans of manes, men, all beings and ending with the mobile (beings) are placed.

8. Then having assigned limbs (for the different deities), withdrawing the mantras one has to go to the house for performing rites. In this way, one has to bathe with the mūlamantra[1].

Footnotes and references:

[1]:

mūlamantra is the basic subtle mystic syllable.

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