Adhyaya 45: Rudra as Sarvatma—Seven Lokas, Seven Talas, and the Cosmic Body of Shiva
वैनायकादिभिश्चैव कालनेमिपुरोगमैः पूर्वदेवैः समाकीर्णं सुतलं च तथापरैः
vaināyakādibhiścaiva kālanemipurogamaiḥ pūrvadevaiḥ samākīrṇaṃ sutalaṃ ca tathāparaiḥ
Sutala, asimismo, está densamente colmado de los antiguos seres divinos—encabezados por Kālanemi y acompañados por huestes como los Vaināyakas—junto con muchas otras clases de seres.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
By mapping Sutala as a populated realm within Shiva’s ordered cosmos, the verse supports the Purāṇic vision that all lokas function under Pati (Shiva) and are ultimately transcended through Shiva-bhakti and Linga-pūjā, not merely through worldly status in any realm.
Indirectly, it presents Shiva-tattva as the supreme governance that holds even the netherworlds in a structured order; the many classes of beings in Sutala indicate a cosmos operating under niyati (cosmic law) within pāśa (bondage), which the soul (paśu) can surpass only by turning to Pati.
No specific rite is prescribed in this verse; its takeaway is contemplative—use cosmological knowledge to cultivate vairāgya and orient practice toward Pāśupata-aligned Shiva-upāsanā and Linga-pūjā as the means to rise beyond all lokas.