कुमाराभिषेकवर्णनम् — Description of Kumāra’s Abhiṣeka
Consecration/Installation
तत्तेजसा वृतं बालं तप्तचामीकरप्रभम् । ववंदिरे द्रुतं सर्वे कुमारं सूर्यवर्चसम्
tattejasā vṛtaṃ bālaṃ taptacāmīkaraprabham | vavaṃdire drutaṃ sarve kumāraṃ sūryavarcasam
Beholding that divine Child, wrapped in his own radiance—shining like heated gold and blazing with the splendor of the sun—all at once they hastened to bow down before that Kumāra.
Sūta Gosvāmin (narrating to the sages at Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Type: stotra
Role: nurturing
Offering: pushpa
The verse highlights divine tejas as a sign of śakti and auspicious presence—when the sacred manifests, the right response is humility and reverent surrender (praṇāma), which purifies the devotee and aligns the mind toward Shiva’s grace.
Kumāra’s sun-like radiance is a Saguna expression of Shiva’s power: devotees approach the visible, perceivable form (with qualities like brilliance and majesty) and offer reverence, which becomes a doorway to realizing Shiva as the supreme Pati beyond all forms.
A simple takeaway is praṇāma with dhyāna: contemplate the divine light (tejas) as Shiva’s śakti, bow with devotion, and silently repeat a Shiva-mantra such as the Pañcākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) to steady the mind in bhakti.