Lokapramāṇa–Grahamaṇḍala–Dhruvaloka-vyavasthā
Cosmic Measures and the Arrangement of the Heavenly Spheres
द्विलक्षयोजनं जीवादूर्ध्वं सौरिर्व्यवस्थितः । एते सप्तग्रहाः प्रोक्तास्स्वस्वराशिव्यवस्थिता
dvilakṣayojanaṃ jīvādūrdhvaṃ saurirvyavasthitaḥ | ete saptagrahāḥ proktāssvasvarāśivyavasthitā
Zwei lakṣa Yojanas über Jīva ist Sauri (Śani, Saturn) aufgestellt. Diese werden als die sieben Planeten verkündet, ein jeder in seinem eigenen Tierkreisabschnitt verweilend.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Īśāna
It frames the cosmos as an ordered system governed by divine law (niyati), reminding the seeker that karmic experience unfolds within a structured universe under the higher sovereignty of Pati (Lord Shiva).
By describing planetary order, the text implicitly points beyond graha-influences to the supreme Lord who transcends and regulates them; Linga-worship centers the devotee in Shiva as the ultimate refuge beyond worldly determinants.
Rather than graha-fear, Shaiva practice emphasizes steady japa of the Panchakshara ("Om Namaḥ Śivāya") and devotion to Shiva as the stabilizing remedy for karmic fluctuations indicated by planetary movements.