Sūtasya Punargamanaṃ Kāśyāṃ—Bhasma-Rudrākṣa-Tripuṇḍra-Vidhiśca
Sūta’s Return to Kāśī and the Observances of Bhasma, Rudrākṣa, and Tripuṇḍra
चण्डेशं सम्प्रपूज्याऽथ मुक्तिमण्डपमध्यतः । निर्द्दिष्टमासनं भेजे मुनिभिर्वेदपारगैः
caṇḍeśaṃ samprapūjyā'tha muktimaṇḍapamadhyataḥ | nirddiṣṭamāsanaṃ bheje munibhirvedapāragaiḥ
Luego, tras rendir culto debidamente a Caṇḍeśa, tomó asiento en medio del Mukti-maṇḍapa, el Salón de la Liberación, en el sitial señalado por los sabios versados en los Vedas.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
The verse highlights the Shaiva Siddhanta principle that liberation-oriented knowledge is approached through disciplined devotion: first honoring Śiva’s devotee-attendant Caṇḍeśa (bhakti and humility), then receiving a rightful place in the Mukti-maṇḍapa under the guidance of Veda-knowing sages (śāstra-guided readiness for moksha).
Caṇḍeśa is closely associated with Śiva’s temple worship and the safeguarding of sacred offerings; worshipping him signifies proper entry into Saguna-Śiva’s ritual order. The Mukti-maṇḍapa setting implies that such outward worship, when performed with right intent, becomes a doorway toward the inward realization of Śiva as Pati, the bestower of liberation.
A clear takeaway is procedural sanctity: perform due pūjā (including honoring Śiva’s gaṇa-devotees like Caṇḍeśa) before assuming a seat for teaching, japa, or śravaṇa. Practically, this aligns with beginning worship with purification, vibhūti (Tripuṇḍra), rudrākṣa, and Panchākṣarī japa (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) before entering a sacred mandapa for contemplation on moksha.