Brahmā–Viṣṇu-Pūjā: Upacāra-Vistāra and Īśvara’s Prasāda
Offerings in Shiva Worship and the Lord’s Grace
लिंगलक्षणयुक्तत्वान्मम लिंगं भवेदिदम् । तदिदं नित्यमभ्यर्च्यं युवाभ्यामत्र पुत्रकौ
liṃgalakṣaṇayuktatvānmama liṃgaṃ bhavedidam | tadidaṃ nityamabhyarcyaṃ yuvābhyāmatra putrakau
Weil es mit den Merkmalen des Liṅga ausgestattet ist, wird dies wahrlich zu Meinem Liṅga. Darum, o geliebte Söhne, sollt ihr beide diesen Liṅga hier unablässig verehren.
Lord Shiva
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Liṅgodbhava
Jyotirlinga: Viśvanātha
Sthala Purana: In the Viśveśvarasaṃhitā setting, Śiva establishes the liṅga as the perpetual object of worship, aligning with Kāśī’s Viśvanātha ideal: the Lord who grants abiding presence and liberation through liṅga-upāsanā.
Significance: Nitya-arcana of the liṅga is taught as a direct means to Śiva’s sānnidhya and eventual liberation; Kāśī is traditionally praised as granting mokṣa through Śiva’s grace.
Offering: pushpa
It affirms that when a form bears the true “liṅga-lakṣaṇas,” it is not merely symbolic but becomes a valid locus of Śiva’s grace—fit for continual worship leading the devotee toward liberation through devotion and right worship.
Śiva authorizes a tangible form (Saguna upāsanā) as “My Liṅga,” teaching that regular worship of the consecrated Liṅga is a direct means to approach the transcendent (Nirguṇa) Lord through a sanctified, accessible embodiment.
Daily (nitya) Liṅga-arcana—steady, repeated worship at the same sacred spot—supported by mantra-japa (especially Śiva’s pañcākṣarī) and simple offerings performed with reverence and constancy.