यक्षेश्वरावतारः (Yakṣeśvara-Avatāra) and the Nīlakaṇṭha Paradigm in the Churning of the Ocean
इत्थं स वर्णितः शम्भोरवतारः सुखावहः । यक्षेश्वराख्यस्सुखदस्सतान्तुष्टोऽभयंकरः
itthaṃ sa varṇitaḥ śambhoravatāraḥ sukhāvahaḥ | yakṣeśvarākhyassukhadassatāntuṣṭo'bhayaṃkaraḥ
So ist die glückverheißende Inkarnation Śambhus beschrieben, die Wohlergehen bringt und Glück spendet. Als Yakṣeśvara bekannt, schenkt Er Freude, ist den Tugendhaften stets wohlgesinnt und verleiht Furchtlosigkeit.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
Sthala Purana: Concluding phala-śruti style summary of the Yakṣeśvara-avatāra: Śiva descends, grants sukha and abhaya, and remains pleased with the virtuous (sat).
Significance: Hearing/reciting the avatāra account cultivates fearlessness (abhaya) and steadiness in dharma; aligns the devotee with Śiva’s protective grace.
Role: nurturing
Offering: pushpa
The verse highlights Śiva’s compassionate Saguna descent as a source of sukha (inner well-being) and abhayā (fearlessness), showing that divine grace removes anxiety and stabilizes the devotee in dharma.
By praising Śambhu’s avatāra as ‘Yakṣeśvara’ and ‘Abhayaṃkara,’ it supports Saguna worship—devotees approach Śiva through a revered form (including the Liṅga) to receive protection, peace, and spiritual assurance.
A practical takeaway is to worship Śiva as Abhayaṃkara with the Pañcākṣarī mantra ("Om Namaḥ Śivāya") and simple Liṅga-pūjā, praying for fearlessness and steadiness in righteous living.