Praṇava-Māhātmya and the Twofold Mantra (Sūkṣma–Sthūla) in Śaiva Sādhanā
तेषां पत्सिक्ततोयेन स्वशिरः स्नानमाचरेत् । षट्त्रिंशत्कोटितीर्थेषु सद्यः स्नानफलं लभेत्
teṣāṃ patsiktatoyena svaśiraḥ snānamācaret | ṣaṭtriṃśatkoṭitīrtheṣu sadyaḥ snānaphalaṃ labhet
Mit dem Wasser, das ihre Füße gewaschen hat, soll man das eigene Haupt baden. Wer so handelt, erlangt sogleich die Frucht eines Bades in sechsunddreißig Krore heiliger Tīrthas—ein Akt der Verehrung, der die Seele durch Bhakti zu Śivas Heiligen reinigt.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Significance: Revering Śiva’s holy ones (guru/bhaktas) through pādya/feet-washing water grants tīrtha-snāna merit and accelerates purification (mala-kṣaya) through bhakti.
Role: nurturing
It teaches that humble reverence to Śiva’s holy ones carries immense purifying power—so potent that it grants the same merit as bathing at countless tīrthas, emphasizing bhakti over mere travel or external display.
In Śaiva practice, honoring Śiva’s devotees is treated as honoring Śiva Himself (Saguna Śiva accessible through His community of worship). Such service supports inner purity, which is foundational for Linga-worship and mantra-japa.
A devotional purification rite: respectfully taking the water used to wash the feet of Śiva’s revered devotees and bathing the head with it, while maintaining a contemplative attitude of surrender and purity.