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Shloka 13

Adhyaya 75: Nishkala–Sakala Shiva, Twofold Linga, and the Supremacy of Dhyana-Yajna

कर्मयज्ञसहस्रेभ्यस् तपोयज्ञो विशिष्यते तपोयज्ञसहस्रेभ्यो जपयज्ञो विशिष्यते

karmayajñasahasrebhyas tapoyajño viśiṣyate tapoyajñasahasrebhyo japayajño viśiṣyate

Than a thousand ritual sacrifices performed through action, the sacrifice of austerity is superior; and than a thousand sacrifices of austerity, the sacrifice of japa—the repetition of the Divine Name, especially of Śiva—is superior. Thus, for the bound soul (paśu), inward worship through mantra becomes the most direct means toward Śiva (Pati).

karma-yajña-sahasrebhyaḥthan thousands of action-based sacrifices
karma-yajña-sahasrebhyaḥ:
tapaḥ-yajñaḥthe sacrifice in the form of austerity
tapaḥ-yajñaḥ:
viśiṣyateis superior/excels
viśiṣyate:
tapaḥ-yajña-sahasrebhyaḥthan thousands of austerity-sacrifices
tapaḥ-yajña-sahasrebhyaḥ:
japa-yajñaḥthe sacrifice in the form of mantra-repetition (japa)
japa-yajñaḥ:
viśiṣyateis superior/excels
viśiṣyate:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It prioritizes inner worship (mānasa-yajña) through Śiva-mantra japa over external ritual, implying that true Liṅga-pūjā culminates in concentrated remembrance and mantra-offering to the Pati (Śiva).

By making japa the highest yajña, the verse points to Śiva as directly approachable through nāma/mantra—transcending mere external acts—so the paśu can move from bondage (pāśa) toward Śiva-consciousness.

Japa-yajña—repetitive recitation of Śiva-mantras (with focus, purity, and steadiness), aligning with Pāśupata-oriented inner discipline where mantra becomes the primary offering.