शङ्खचूडकस्य राज्याभिषेकः तथा शक्रपुरीं प्रति प्रस्थानम् | Śaṅkhacūḍa’s Coronation and March toward Indra’s City
गच्छन्स दानवेन्द्रस्तु तेषां सेवनकुर्वताम् । विरेजे शशिवद्भानां ग्रहाणां ग्रहराडिव
gacchansa dānavendrastu teṣāṃ sevanakurvatām | vireje śaśivadbhānāṃ grahāṇāṃ graharāḍiva
As the lord of the Dānavas moved on, while his attendants waited upon him in service, he shone forth—like the Moon among the radiant planets, like the sovereign of the grahas.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
The verse highlights worldly brilliance and authority—depicting the Dānava leader as dazzling like the moon—yet, in a Shaiva Siddhanta lens, such splendor remains within māyā and is not equal to Shiva (Pati), whose grace alone frees the bound soul (paśu) from bondage (pāśa).
By contrasting a powerful being’s outward radiance with the deeper supremacy of the Divine, the narrative implicitly points the devotee toward Saguna Shiva worship (Linga, mantra, and bhakti) as the true refuge beyond political or martial grandeur.
A practical takeaway is to redirect admiration for worldly power into devotion: chant the Panchākṣarī “Om Namaḥ Śivāya” with steadiness and humility, remembering that real sovereignty is Shiva’s grace rather than external brilliance.