उमास्वयंवरः / भवोद्वाहः, गणसमागमः, अविमुक्तक्षेत्रमाहात्म्यम्, तथा विनायक-उत्पत्तिसूचना
स्वात्मानमपि देवाय सोदकं प्रददौ हरिः अथ सर्वे मुनिश्रेष्ठाः सर्ववेदार्थपारगाः
svātmānamapi devāya sodakaṃ pradadau hariḥ atha sarve muniśreṣṭhāḥ sarvavedārthapāragāḥ
Hari (Viṣṇu), offering water in due form, presented even his own self to the Deva (Śiva). Then all the best of sages—those who had crossed to the far shore of the meaning of all the Vedas—(likewise assented and followed that act of surrender).
Suta Goswami
It highlights udaka-offering (ritual water) and the highest limb of worship—ātma-nivedana—where the devotee offers the very self to Śiva as Pati, not merely external gifts.
Śiva is presented as the Deva worthy of total surrender: the supreme Pati who receives the pashu’s self-offering and, by that grace-oriented relationship, loosens pasha (bondage) beyond mere ritual merit.
A simple but central Shiva-pūjā element—offering water (udaka)—is paired with the yogic-bhakti principle of self-surrender, a Pāśupata-aligned attitude where the pashu entrusts itself to Pati.