Aghora-Mantra Japa: Graded Expiations, Pañcagavya Purification, and Homa for Mahāpātaka-Nivṛtti
लक्षं जप्त्वा ह्यघोरेभ्यो ब्रह्महा मुच्यते प्रभो तदर्धं वाचिके वत्स तदर्धं मानसे पुनः
lakṣaṃ japtvā hyaghorebhyo brahmahā mucyate prabho tadardhaṃ vācike vatsa tadardhaṃ mānase punaḥ
O Lord, even a slayer of a brāhmaṇa is released by completing one hundred thousand recitations of the Aghora mantra. O dear one, if recited aloud, half that number suffices; and if performed mentally, again half of that.
Suta Goswami (narrating a teaching on mantra-prāyaścitta within the Linga Purana’s Shaiva discourse)
It frames Shiva-mantra japa (Aghora) as a direct purificatory discipline: by taking refuge in Pati (Shiva) through mantra, even severe pāpa is cut, making the devotee fit for Linga-pūjā and Shaiva observance.
Shiva is implied as Aghora—the non-terrifying, grace-bestowing reality whose mantra dissolves pāśa (bondage) and restores the pashu (individual soul) toward purity and release.
Aghora-mantra japa as prāyaścitta, with an explicit hierarchy of efficacy: mental japa is presented as more potent than verbal recitation, aligning with an inward Pāśupata-oriented discipline.