अग्नियज्ञ-देवयज्ञ-ब्रह्मयज्ञ-गुरुपूजा-क्रमनिरूपणम् / Ordering and Definitions of Agniyajña, Devayajña, Brahmayajña, and Guru-Pūjā
प्रारब्धं प्रबलं चेत्स्यान्नश्येद्रो गजरादिकम् । जपाद्यमिष्टदेवस्य वारादीनां फलं विदुः
prārabdhaṃ prabalaṃ cetsyānnaśyedro gajarādikam | japādyamiṣṭadevasya vārādīnāṃ phalaṃ viduḥ
إذا اشتدّت قوّةُ برارابْدها-كارما (ثمارُ القدر التي بدأت بالفعل في الجريان)، فقد تفشل حتى العلاجاتُ كالأدوية وما شابهها في إزالة المرض والآلام. غير أنّ الحكماء يعلمون أنّ ثمرَ النُّسُك والالتزامات التي تبدأ بالنذور المقدّسة (فرَتا)، والممارسات التي تبدأ بالجَپا—إذا أُدّيت للإله المختار، للربّ المقصود بالعبادة—فإنها تُؤتي ثمرها لا محالة.
Sūta Gosvāmin (narrating to the sages at Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
Significance: Teaches that when prārabdha and afflictions overpower ordinary remedies, Śiva-upāsanā (japa, vrata) remains efficacious—supporting pilgrimage/vrata culture centered on Śiva as Paśupati who loosens bonds.
Type: panchakshara
Role: liberating
It teaches that when prārabdha-karma is intense, worldly measures may not suffice, but Śiva-oriented sādhana—especially japa and vrata—still yields spiritual and karmic fruition, aligning the soul toward Śiva’s grace.
In the Vidyeśvara Saṃhitā, Śiva worship is presented as practical and transformative; japa and observances directed to Saguna Śiva (often through Liṅga-pūjā) are upheld as reliable means to purify bondage (pāśa) and steady devotion.
Regular mantra-japa (classically the Pañcākṣarī, “Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) along with vrata-based discipline—such as fasting, restraint, and focused Śiva-pūjā—undertaken with faith and continuity.