नैमित्तिकविधिक्रमः
Occasional Rites and Their Procedure
मासिमासि यथान्यायं ब्रह्मकूर्चं प्रसाध्य तु । स्नापयित्वा शिवं तेन पिबेच्छेषमुपोषितः
māsimāsi yathānyāyaṃ brahmakūrcaṃ prasādhya tu | snāpayitvā śivaṃ tena pibeccheṣamupoṣitaḥ
Mes tras mes, conforme a la norma prescrita, debe prepararse debidamente la mezcla consagrada y purificadora llamada brahmakūrca. Habiendo bañado con ella al Señor Śiva y guardando ayuno, debe beberse luego lo que reste como sagrado remanente (śeṣa).
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Sthala Purana: Not tied to a particular Jyotirliṅga; it teaches a recurring monthly purificatory observance (brahmakūrca) used for Śiva-snāna and then consumed as prasāda, framing Śiva as the purifier who loosens pāśa (bondage).
Significance: Monthly discipline (māsimāsi) combines abhiṣeka + upavāsa + prasāda-sevana, cultivating purity, restraint, and devotion—classically understood as preparing the paśu for Śiva’s grace.
Role: nurturing
Offering: naivedya
It presents disciplined, repeated worship—monthly purification, Śiva-abhiṣeka, and fasting—as a means to refine the soul (paśu) and loosen bonds (pāśa), culminating in grace (Śiva’s anugraha) through sacred remainder (prasāda).
The instruction “to bathe Śiva” points to ritual abhiṣeka commonly performed to the Śiva-liṅga, a Saguna form accessible to devotees; the act sanctifies the devotee’s body-mind and turns ritual purity into inward devotion.
A monthly observance: prepare the brahmakūrca as prescribed, perform Śiva-abhiṣeka, keep upavāsa (fasting), and partake of the remaining sanctified liquid as prasāda—ideally accompanied by japa such as the Pañcākṣarī (Om Namaḥ Śivāya).