नारदस्य विष्णूपदेशवर्णनम् — Nārada and Viṣṇu: Instruction after Delusion
कृतं समुचितन्नैव शिवेन परमात्मना । तत्प्रभावबलं ध्यात्वा स्वतंत्रकृतिकारकः
kṛtaṃ samucitannaiva śivena paramātmanā | tatprabhāvabalaṃ dhyātvā svataṃtrakṛtikārakaḥ
إنَّ الذاتَ العُليا، الربَّ شِيفا، لم يَفعل البتّة ما كان لائقًا للغرض العاجل. ولمّا تأمّل عاملُ الخلقِ قوّةَ سلطانِه وتأثيرَ قدرته، مضى—مستقلًّا في فعله—ليُنجزَ عملَ الإيجاد والخلق.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Rudrasaṃhitā account of creation to the sages at Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Role: creative
Cosmic Event: Sṛṣṭi (cosmogonic transition into manifest creation)
It highlights Śiva as Paramātmā whose supreme power (prabhāva-bala) governs creation, and it points to contemplative recognition of that divine sovereignty as spiritually transformative in a Shaiva Siddhanta sense (Pati as the ultimate Lord).
Meditating on Śiva’s prabhāva-bala naturally supports Saguna upāsanā: the devotee contemplates the Lord’s manifest majesty and lordship, commonly approached through Liṅga worship as the accessible, sacred focus of the transcendent Paramātmā.
A clear takeaway is dhyāna (meditation) on Śiva’s power and grace—practically supported by japa of the Pañcākṣarī (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) and focused contemplation before the Śiva-liṅga, even if specific items like bhasma or rudrākṣa are not explicitly named in this verse.