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Shloka 77

वासिष्ठकथनम् (आदित्य–सोमवंशवर्णनम् तथा रुद्रसहस्रनाम-प्रशंसा)

तेजो ऽपहारी बलवान् विदितो ऽभ्युदितो बहुः गंभीरघोषो योगात्मा यज्ञहा कामनाशनः

tejo 'pahārī balavān vidito 'bhyudito bahuḥ gaṃbhīraghoṣo yogātmā yajñahā kāmanāśanaḥ

Pati, Mahādeva nacido del Liṅga: Aquel que recoge en Sí todo resplandor; el Poderoso; el Bien conocido; el Siempre elevado y que siempre se alza; el Múltiple. De voz profunda y tronante; cuya esencia es el Yoga; Soberano del yajña; Destructor del deseo.

tejaḥ-apahārīwithdrawer/absorber of radiance (into Himself)
tejaḥ-apahārī:
balavānpowerful, mighty
balavān:
viditaḥwell-known, renowned
viditaḥ:
abhyuditaḥrisen, exalted, ever-ascending
abhyuditaḥ:
bahuḥmany-formed, manifold
bahuḥ:
gambhīra-ghoṣaḥdeep-voiced, of profound sound
gambhīra-ghoṣaḥ:
yoga-ātmāwhose essence is Yoga, the very Self of yogic union
yoga-ātmā:
yajña-hāone who ends/overrules sacrifice (as the supreme recipient beyond ritual)
yajña-hā:
kāmanā-śanaḥdestroyer of desires (burner of kāma).
kāmanā-śanaḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating the Shiva Sahasranama to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames the Linga-Lord as the inner power behind all ritual: He absorbs all tejas, stands beyond external yajña, and grants purification by burning desire—so worship shifts from mere rite to inner surrender to Pati.

Shiva is presented as Pati who is both immanent and transcendent: many-formed yet one, the source into which all radiance returns, and Yoga itself—liberating the pashu by destroying kāmanā (desire) which functions as pasha (bondage).

The verse emphasizes Pāśupata-oriented inner yoga: restraining desire and redirecting the mind from external sacrifice to yogic union with Shiva, the true recipient and fulfiller of all sacred acts.