Śivakṣetra–Tīrtha–Māhātmya
The Salvific Function of Shiva’s Sacred Domains
गोदावरी महापुण्या ब्रह्मगोवधनाशिनी । एकविंशमुखा प्रोक्ता रुद्र लोकप्रदायिनी
godāvarī mahāpuṇyā brahmagovadhanāśinī | ekaviṃśamukhā proktā rudra lokapradāyinī
The Godāvarī is supremely holy, destroying the sin of brahma-slaying and cow-slaying. She is declared to be “twenty-one-mouthed,” and she bestows the world (abode) of Rudra (Lord Śiva).
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
Jyotirlinga: Tryambakeśvara
Sthala Purana: Godāvarī is praised as a supreme tīrtha whose contact destroys mahāpātakas (brahmahatyā, gohatyā) and, by Śiva’s grace, grants Rudraloka; this aligns with the Godāvarī’s sacrality at Tryambaka where the river is traditionally said to arise and where tīrtha-sevā is linked with Śiva-loka attainment.
Significance: Snāna/tīrtha-sevā on Godāvarī with Śiva-bhakti is framed as pāśa-kṣaya (bondage/sin attenuation) culminating in Rudraloka—i.e., proximity to Śiva’s sphere through anugraha.
It proclaims the Godāvarī as a Śiva-sanctified tīrtha whose sacredness purifies even grave karmic impurities and, when approached with devotion and right conduct, becomes a means toward Rudra-loka—nearness to Lord Śiva’s grace and liberation-oriented merit.
In the Shiva Purana, tīrtha-mahātmyas support Saguna-Śiva worship: bathing and worship at a holy river are framed as aids to Linga-pūjā, japa, and vrata, preparing the devotee for Śiva’s anugraha (grace) that leads toward higher realms such as Rudra-loka.
A practical takeaway is tīrtha-snānā (sacred bath) at the Godāvarī followed by Śiva worship—Linga-archana, Panchākṣarī japa (Om Namaḥ Śivāya), and observance of purity and restraint—seeking purification and Rudra’s grace.