स्नानविधिः — गायत्र्यावाहन, सूर्यवन्दन, तर्पण, पञ्चमहायज्ञ, भस्मस्नान, मन्त्रस्नान
ब्रह्मयज्ञेन तुष्यन्ति सर्वे देवाः सवासवाः ब्रह्मा च भगवान्विष्णुः शङ्करो नीललोहितः
brahmayajñena tuṣyanti sarve devāḥ savāsavāḥ brahmā ca bhagavānviṣṇuḥ śaṅkaro nīlalohitaḥ
Por el Brahma-yajña (la ofrenda sagrada de recitación y estudio védico), todos los dioses—junto con Indra—quedan satisfechos; también Brahmā, el Señor Viṣṇu y Śaṅkara, el Rudra Nīlalohita de tonalidad azul y roja. Así, el Brahma-yajña se vuelve un medio para armonizar a las deidades bajo la soberanía de Pati (Śiva), aflojando el pāśa del descuido del dharma en el paśu (alma atada).
Suta Goswami (narrating the Linga Purana tradition to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It teaches that Brahma-yajña—Vedic recitation and sacred study offered as worship—functions as a valid yajña that satisfies the entire divine order, supporting Linga-oriented devotion by grounding it in śruti-based discipline and daily dharma.
By naming Śiva as Śaṅkara and Nīlalohita, the verse presents him as the beneficent Rudra who pervades and completes the pantheon; even when multiple deities are listed, Shaiva theology reads their satisfaction as ultimately converging in Pati, the supreme Lord who grants grace and releases bondage.
Brahma-yajña is highlighted: daily Vedic study/recitation offered as sacrifice; in a Shaiva frame it supports purity (śuddhi) and steadiness for Pashupata-oriented sadhana by aligning the pashu with dharma and devotion.