देवैर्विष्णोः शरणागमनम्—शिवलिङ्गस्थापनं, शिवसहस्रनामस्तवः, सुदर्शनचक्रप्रदानं च
शाखो विशाखो गोशाखः शिवो नैकः क्रतुः समः गङ्गाप्लवोदको भावः सकलः स्थपतिः स्थिरः
śākho viśākho gośākhaḥ śivo naikaḥ kratuḥ samaḥ gaṅgāplavodako bhāvaḥ sakalaḥ sthapatiḥ sthiraḥ
He is Śākha and Viśākha, the many-branched One who spreads forth as protection; He is Gośākha, guardian of the herds. He is Śiva, the auspicious Lord, yet not confined to oneness alone. He is Kratu, the power of Vedic sacrifice, and Sama, the equal and impartial. He is the water of the Gaṅgā’s holy flood; He is Bhāva, the principle of Being; He is Sakala, the Whole; He is Sthapati, the divine Architect; and He is Sthira, the Unshakably Steady.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Shiva Sahasranama to the sages of Naimisharanya)
By naming Shiva as Sakala and Sthapati, the verse frames Linga worship as approaching the complete Pati who both manifests the cosmos and establishes sacred order; the Linga becomes the stable focus for that all-pervading Lord.
It presents Shiva as simultaneously transcendent and immanent: beyond limitation (naika), yet present as sacrifice (kratu), purity (Gaṅgā’s waters), existence itself (bhāva), and the steadfast ground (sthira) supporting all pashus.
Kratu points to Vedic-yajña offered to Shiva, while Gaṅgāplavodaka implies purification (snāna/ācamana) as a preparatory limb of Shiva-pūjā; inwardly, it supports Pāśupata discipline through equality (sama) and steadiness (sthira).