Varaha-Pradurbhava Context: Prahlada’s Bhakti, Narasimha’s Ugra-Form, and Shiva’s Sharabha Intervention
प्रह्रादः पूजयामास नमो नारायणेति च नमो नारायणायेति सर्वदैत्यकुमारकान्
prahrādaḥ pūjayāmāsa namo nārāyaṇeti ca namo nārāyaṇāyeti sarvadaityakumārakān
عبدَ برهلادا بخشوعٍ، ودرّب جميع أمراء الديتيَة على الانحناء بتسليمات: «نمو نارايَنة» و«نمو نارايَنايا». وفي الفهم الشيفي، فإن بهاكتي منضبطة كهذه تُطهِّر الـpaśu (النفس المقيَّدة) وتُهيِّئها لمعرفة الـPati الواحد—شيفا—وهو أيضاً الذات الباطنة لنارايَنة، متجاوزاً كل انقسامٍ مذهبي.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Purana to the sages; internal episode describing Prahlada)
It shows the foundational discipline of devotion and repeated salutation (namo-japa). In the Linga Purana’s Shaiva frame, such bhakti refines the paśu (soul) and becomes a preparatory samskāra for later Śiva-pūjā and Linga-upāsanā.
Though Nārāyaṇa is named explicitly, the Purana’s theology commonly reads this as non-dual reverence: the supreme Pati (Śiva) is the indwelling reality not opposed to Nārāyaṇa. The verse supports the Hari-Hara unity that culminates in recognizing Śiva-tattva as the highest liberating principle.
Mantra-japa and disciplined bhakti instruction—teaching a community to perform namas (salutation) as a daily practice. This aligns with Shaiva sādhanā as a means to loosen pāśa (bondage) and stabilize the mind for higher yoga.