Adhyaya 61 — ग्रह-नक्षत्र-स्थाननिर्णयः
Cosmic Abodes of Luminaries and the Shaiva Order of Time
आषाढास्विह पूर्वासु समुत्पन्न इति स्मृतः रेवतीष्वेव सप्तार्चिःस्थाने सौरिः शनैश्चरः
āṣāḍhāsviha pūrvāsu samutpanna iti smṛtaḥ revatīṣveva saptārciḥsthāne sauriḥ śanaiścaraḥ
يُتَذَكَّرُ في المأثور أنّه في هذا الترتيب الكوني وُلِدَ شَنَيْشْچَرَ، البطيء السَّير—سَوْرِي—في نَكْشَتْرَة بُورْفَاشَاضْهَا؛ وأن مقامه المُثبَت في رِيفَتِي، في الموضع المسمّى سَبْتَارْچِه (اللَّهَبات السبع).
Suta Goswami
By locating Śani within a divinely ordered nakṣatra-sthāna, the verse supports the Shaiva view that grahas operate under the sovereignty of Pati (Śiva); thus, graha-related rites ultimately become acts of alignment with Śiva through Linga-centered devotion.
Implicitly, it presents Shiva-tattva as the supreme governor of cosmic law: even powerful karmic forces like Śani function within ordained stations, indicating the supremacy of Pati over pasha (bondage) that conditions the pashu (individual soul).
The verse is primarily jyotiṣa-doctrinal; in Shaiva practice it points toward karma-shuddhi through Śiva-upāsanā—Linga-pūjā, japa, and disciplined conduct to endure and transcend Śani-related pasha rather than merely fearing planetary influence.