Adhyaya 72 — Puradāha: Rudra’s Cosmic Chariot, Pāśupata-Vrata, and Brahmā’s Shiva-Stuti
शिवाय शिवतत्त्वाय अघोराय नमोनमः अघोराष्टकतत्त्वाय द्वादशात्मस्वरूपिणे
śivāya śivatattvāya aghorāya namonamaḥ aghorāṣṭakatattvāya dvādaśātmasvarūpiṇe
نَمو نَمو لِشِڤا—هو عينُ شِڤا-تتڤا (Śiva-tattva)، وهو أَغورا (Aghora): غيرُ مُخيفٍ بل مُبارَك. نَمو له، الذي تُعلَّم حقيقتُه كـ«أَغورا-أَشْتَكَة» (Aghora-Aṣṭaka)، والذي يتجلّى بصورة الذات ذات الاثني عشر وجهًا.
Suta Goswami (narrating a received stuti within the Purva-Bhaga context)
It functions as a tattva-focused salutation: the devotee worships the Linga not merely as a symbol but as Śiva-tattva itself—Aghora, the auspicious Pati who dissolves fear and purifies the pashu (individual soul) from pāśa (bondage).
Śiva is identified with His own ultimate reality (Śiva-tattva) and praised as Aghora—indicating the Lord’s grace-filled, non-terrifying essence that restores the soul to clarity, freedom, and right knowledge.
Aghora-oriented japa and stuti are implied—invoking Śiva as the inner twelvefold presence, a contemplative practice aligned with Pāśupata discipline where devotion and insight loosen pāśa and establish the pashu in the Lord (Pati).