Liṅga-pratiṣṭhāvidhiḥ — Installation Standards and Auspicious Parameters for Liṅga Worship
संध्ययोश्च सहस्रं वा ज्ञेयं शिवपदप्रदम् । जपकाले मकारांतं मनःशुद्धिकरं भजेत्
saṃdhyayośca sahasraṃ vā jñeyaṃ śivapadapradam | japakāle makārāṃtaṃ manaḥśuddhikaraṃ bhajet
Zu den beiden Sandhyā-Zeiten, bei Morgendämmerung und Abenddämmerung, soll man wissen: Tausend Wiederholungen verleihen den Stand und die Wohnstatt Śivas. Während des Japa verehre man das Mantra, das auf „ma“ endet, nämlich das fünfsilbige „namaḥ śivāya“, denn es reinigt den Geist.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva’s worship-teachings to the sages at Naimisharanya)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Sthala Purana: General sādhana instruction: sandhyā-japa (dawn/dusk) with a reduced count (1000) is declared Śiva-pada-prada; it then specifies the ‘makārānta’ mantra—pañcākṣarī ending in ‘-ma’ (namaḥ śivāya)—as mind-purifying.
Significance: Establishes a practical daily regimen: sandhyā-based japa integrates devotion into liminal times, promising purification and Śiva’s state.
Mantra: namaḥ śivāya
Type: panchakshara
Role: teaching
It teaches that disciplined japa at the sacred sandhyā times, especially of the Panchākṣarī, purifies the mind and leads the devotee toward Shiva-pada (liberation and nearness to Pati, Shiva).
The verse emphasizes mantra-upāsanā as a primary limb of Saguna Shiva worship: the devotee approaches Shiva (often as Linga) through repeated remembrance of His name, which refines the inner instrument and deepens devotion.
Perform japa at dawn and dusk—traditionally aiming for a thousand repetitions—focusing on the Panchākṣarī “namaḥ śivāya” (the mantra ending in “ma”), with steady attention for mental purification.