Śivapūjā-vidhi: Purifications, Sūrya–Graha Mantras, Nyāsa, and Bhūtaśuddhi leading to Śivoham-bhāva
इच्छाज्ञानक्रियाशक्तिस्त्रिनेत्रो हि सदाशिवः / एवं शिवार्चनध्यानी सर्वदा कालवर्जितः
icchājñānakriyāśaktistrinetro hi sadāśivaḥ / evaṃ śivārcanadhyānī sarvadā kālavarjitaḥ
سَدَاشِيفا حقًّا هو الربّ ذو العيون الثلاث، وقواه هي الإرادة والمعرفة والفعل. وهكذا فإن من يعبد شِيفا ويثبت في التأمّل دائمًا يكون متجاوزًا لسلطان الزمان (الموت).
Lord Viṣṇu (speaking to Garuḍa/Vinatā-putra)
Concept: Sadāśiva embodies icchā-jñāna-kriyā-śakti; steadfast worship and meditative absorption lead beyond the dominion of Time (kāla).
Vedantic Theme: Transcending kāla through identification with/abidance in the timeless reality; purification and samādhi as means to fearlessness (abhaya).
Application: Daily: japa + dhyāna on the three-eyed Lord; cultivate will aligned to dharma (icchā), discernment (jñāna), and disciplined practice (kriyā).
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.23.56 (dhyāna-iconography support); Garuda Purana 1.23.58-59 (time/season and longevity motifs in the same flow)
This verse presents Śivārcana joined with dhyāna as a liberating discipline: devotion to Sadāśiva aligns the practitioner with the divine powers of will, knowledge, and action, leading toward transcendence of Kāla (mortality).
By stating that the Śiva-worshipper who meditates is “kāla-varjitaḥ,” it frames liberation as inner absorption in the eternal (Sadāśiva), whereby time-bound fear and death lose their hold.
Combine simple daily Śiva worship (arcana) with steady meditation: cultivate disciplined intention (icchā), right understanding (jñāna), and ethical action (kriyā) as a lived path toward fearlessness and spiritual freedom.