Adhyaya 61 — ग्रह-नक्षत्र-स्थाननिर्णयः
Cosmic Abodes of Luminaries and the Shaiva Order of Time
सौम्यो बुधो धनिष्ठासु पञ्चार्चिर् उदितो ग्रहः तमोमयो मृत्युसुतः प्रजाक्षयकरः शिखी
saumyo budho dhaniṣṭhāsu pañcārcir udito grahaḥ tamomayo mṛtyusutaḥ prajākṣayakaraḥ śikhī
Budha (Mercurio), de disposición apacible, se eleva en la mansión lunar Dhaniṣṭhā con cinco rayos. Pero también se le describe como hecho de oscuridad, nacido de Mṛtyu (la Muerte), coronado por una llama, y capaz de consumir la descendencia; así se muestra cómo los grahas, bajo el señorío de Pati (Śiva), se vuelven instrumentos por los que maduran los lazos kármicos (pāśa) del paśu (el alma encarnada).
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya)
By portraying Mercury as both gentle and tamasic, the verse implies that planetary forces are not ultimate powers; they operate within Śiva’s cosmic order. Linga worship is thus a Shaiva means to align the pashu with Pati, reducing karmic turbulence signified by grahas.
Shiva-tattva is implied as the transcendent governance behind all cosmic functions: even grahas that “seize” beings through karma serve the maturation and release of bondage (pāśa), ultimately guiding the soul toward purification and liberation.
Graha-śānti through Shaiva upāsanā is suggested: steady japa of Śiva-mantra and Linga-pūjā to pacify karmic afflictions, combined with Pāśupata-style inner discipline (vairāgya and self-restraint) to weaken tamas-driven outcomes.