मङ्गलाचरणम्, तीर्थ-परिसरः, सूतागमनम् — Invocation, Sacred Setting, and the Arrival of Sūta
तत्र शैवं तुरीयं यच्छार्वं सर्वार्थसाधकम् । ग्रंथो लक्षप्रमाणं तद्व्यस्तं द्वादशसंहितम्
tatra śaivaṃ turīyaṃ yacchārvaṃ sarvārthasādhakam | graṃtho lakṣapramāṇaṃ tadvyastaṃ dvādaśasaṃhitam
„Unter ihnen ist der Śaiva-Teil der vierte, Śarva (Herrn Śiva) zugehörig und imstande, alle Lebensziele zu vollenden. Diese Schrift umfasst hunderttausend Verse und ist in zwölf Saṃhitās gegliedert.“
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Sthala Purana: Not a site-legend; it is a canon statement: the Śaiva portion is ‘turīya’ (the fourth) and ‘śārva’ (belonging to Śarva), presented as sarvārtha-sādhaka.
Significance: Frames the Śiva Purāṇa as a mokṣa-oriented śāstra whose hearing/recitation is itself a sādhana for puruṣārtha-fulfillment, especially mokṣa through Śiva’s grace.
Role: liberating
It declares the Śaiva teaching as a complete path that fulfills all puruṣārthas—culminating in mokṣa through devotion to Pati (Śiva) and right understanding of bondage (pāśa) and the bound soul (paśu).
By identifying the Śārva section as ‘all-accomplishing,’ it frames Saguna Śiva worship—especially Liṅga-upāsanā—as an authoritative means for both worldly welfare and liberation, consistent with Śaiva Siddhānta’s disciplined devotion.
While not naming a single rite, it points to adopting the Śaiva discipline taught in the Purāṇa—regular Śiva-pūjā (often to the Liṅga), mantra-japa (notably the pañcākṣarī), and yogic contemplation aimed at mokṣa.