शैवधर्मप्रशंसा तथा पञ्चविधसाधनविभागः / Praise of Śaiva Dharma and the Fivefold Classification of Practice
स्वतंत्रो दशधा पूर्वं तथाष्टादशधा पुनः । कामिकादिसमाख्याभिस्सिद्धः सिद्धान्तसंज्ञितः
svataṃtro daśadhā pūrvaṃ tathāṣṭādaśadhā punaḥ | kāmikādisamākhyābhissiddhaḥ siddhāntasaṃjñitaḥ
Diese śaivische Lehre ist in sich selbst autoritativ: einst wurde sie in zehn Gliederungen dargelegt und dann wiederum in achtzehn. Unter Titeln, die mit Kāmika und dergleichen beginnen, begründet, heißt sie daher „Siddhānta“.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Vāyavīya discourse to the sages at Naimisharanya)
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Role: teaching
It affirms that Shaiva Siddhānta is a self-valid tradition grounded in Śiva’s Āgamas, presented in structured divisions (ten and eighteen), guiding the soul (paśu) toward liberation through Śiva’s grace and right practice.
By pointing to the Kāmikādi Āgamas as the established basis of Siddhānta, it implicitly roots Saguna Śiva worship—especially Agamic Linga worship, mantra, and temple/ritual procedures—in an authoritative Shaiva scriptural corpus.
The verse points toward following Agamic (Siddhānta) discipline—mantra-japa (notably Śiva-mantras such as the Pañcākṣarī), dīkṣā-based practice, and regulated worship (pūjā/arcana) as taught in the Kāmikādi traditions.