शिवस्य सैन्यप्रयाणम् तथा गणपतिनामावलिः (Śiva’s Mobilization for War and the Catalogue of Gaṇa Commanders)
विष्टंभोऽष्टाभिरेवेह गणपस्सर्वस त्तमः । पिप्पलश्च सहस्रेण संनादश्च तथाविधः
viṣṭaṃbho'ṣṭābhireveha gaṇapassarvasa ttamaḥ | pippalaśca sahasreṇa saṃnādaśca tathāvidhaḥ
Here, the foremost Gaṇapa named Viṣṭambha stood supported by eight attendants. Pippala stood with a thousand, and Saṃnāda too in the same manner—each accompanied by his own great host.
Sūta Gosvāmi (narrating to the sages at Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
It highlights the ordered might of Śiva’s divine attendants (Gaṇas): their discipline and hierarchy symbolize how Pati (Śiva) governs cosmic forces through devoted, well-arranged energies—power guided by dharma, not chaos.
In Saguna worship, Śiva is revered with attributes, retinue, and divine functions. The Gaṇas represent Śiva’s manifested governance in the world; remembering them supports devotion to the living presence of Śiva as Lord who protects and restores order.
A practical takeaway is Gaṇapati-smaraṇa before Śiva-pūjā—beginning worship with “Om Gaṃ Gaṇapataye Namaḥ” and then the Pañcākṣarī “Om Namaḥ Śivāya,” aligning one’s inner forces with Śiva’s disciplined, protective order.