Aghora-Mantra Japa: Graded Expiations, Pañcagavya Purification, and Homa for Mahāpātaka-Nivṛtti
लक्षं जप्त्वा ह्यघोरेभ्यो ब्रह्महा मुच्यते प्रभो तदर्धं वाचिके वत्स तदर्धं मानसे पुनः
lakṣaṃ japtvā hyaghorebhyo brahmahā mucyate prabho tadardhaṃ vācike vatsa tadardhaṃ mānase punaḥ
Oh Señor, aun quien ha matado a un brāhmaṇa queda libre al completar cien mil recitaciones del mantra Aghora. Oh amado, si se recita en voz alta basta la mitad de ese número, y si se realiza en la mente, basta de nuevo la mitad de esa mitad.
Suta Goswami (narrating a teaching on mantra-prāyaścitta within the Linga Purana’s Shaiva discourse)
It frames Shiva-mantra japa (Aghora) as a direct purificatory discipline: by taking refuge in Pati (Shiva) through mantra, even severe pāpa is cut, making the devotee fit for Linga-pūjā and Shaiva observance.
Shiva is implied as Aghora—the non-terrifying, grace-bestowing reality whose mantra dissolves pāśa (bondage) and restores the pashu (individual soul) toward purity and release.
Aghora-mantra japa as prāyaścitta, with an explicit hierarchy of efficacy: mental japa is presented as more potent than verbal recitation, aligning with an inward Pāśupata-oriented discipline.