शुभादावशुभांते च जन्मर्क्षेषु गृहे गृही । आरोग्यादिसमृद्ध्यर्थमादित्यादीन्ग्रहान्यजेत्
śubhādāvaśubhāṃte ca janmarkṣeṣu gṛhe gṛhī | ārogyādisamṛddhyarthamādityādīngrahānyajet
At the beginning of auspicious undertakings and at the close of inauspicious periods, and on one’s birth-star days, the householder should perform worship to the Grahas beginning with Āditya (the Sun), for the sake of health and other prosperities.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Sthala Purana: Not a Jyotirliṅga episode; the verse treats graha-śānti as a worldly remedial rite within dharma, implying that astral influences operate within māyā/pāśa and are managed through sanctioned worship.
Significance: Frames health/prosperity as attainable through timely propitiation; in Śaiva Siddhānta this remains within laukika-phala unless oriented to Śiva-bhakti and liberation.
Offering: pushpa
It teaches that a devotee—especially a householder—should harmonize worldly life with dharma by sanctifying time (kāla) through disciplined worship, seeking health and stability while remaining oriented toward Shiva as the supreme refuge.
In Shaiva practice, auxiliary propitiations (like graha-śānti) support orderly living, but the central worship remains Saguna Shiva—often as the Linga—who is regarded as the Lord of time and the inner ruler beyond all planetary influences.
It suggests graha-yajana (propitiation of the Navagrahas, beginning with the Sun) at key times; a Shaiva may integrate this with Shiva-upāsanā—japa of “Om Namaḥ Śivāya,” offering water and lamps, and maintaining purity and restraint during observances.