Brahmā–Viṣṇu-Pūjā: Upacāra-Vistāra and Īśvara’s Prasāda
Offerings in Shiva Worship and the Lord’s Grace
तस्मान्महत्तरमिदं क्षेत्रमत्यंतशोभनम् । सर्वकल्याणसंपूर्णं सर्वमुक्तिकरं शुभम्
tasmānmahattaramidaṃ kṣetramatyaṃtaśobhanam | sarvakalyāṇasaṃpūrṇaṃ sarvamuktikaraṃ śubham
Darum ist dieses heilige Kṣetra überaus groß und überaus schön—vollendet in allem Heilvollen, aus sich selbst heilig und ein Spender der Befreiung für alle.
Suta Goswami (narrating the kṣetra-māhātmya to the sages of Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Umāpati
Sthala Purana: Concluding summary: the kṣetra is supremely splendid, filled with all auspiciousness, and universally liberating—presenting the site as a complete spiritual ecology (dharma, artha, kāma purified toward mokṣa).
Significance: Affirms the kṣetra as sarva-kalyāṇa and sarva-mukti-kara: accessible to all classes of seekers; emphasizes Śiva’s universal salvific intent.
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: nurturing
Offering: pushpa
It proclaims that a Shiva-kṣetra is not merely scenic or holy by convention; it is intrinsically auspicious and capable of leading devotees toward moksha through devotion, purity, and right worship of Pati (Shiva).
A kṣetra becomes “liberation-giving” because it centers on Saguna Shiva worship—especially reverence to the Linga—through which the mind is steadied in bhakti and gradually led toward Shiva’s liberating grace.
Pilgrimage with disciplined Shiva-upāsanā—Linga-darśana, japa of Shiva’s names (notably the Panchakshara), and maintaining purity and devotion—aligns with the verse’s promise of auspiciousness and liberation.