प्रणवविभागः—वेदस्वरूपत्वं लिङ्गे च प्रतिष्ठा
The Division of Oṃ, Its Vedic Forms, and Its Placement in the Liṅga
यत्रावाह्य समाराध्यः केवलो निष्कलः शिवः । तत्तेष्वपि तदा बिंदोर्नादाच्छक्तेस्ततः परात्
yatrāvāhya samārādhyaḥ kevalo niṣkalaḥ śivaḥ | tatteṣvapi tadā biṃdornādācchaktestataḥ parāt
Donde el Único Śiva, sin partes (niṣkala), es invocado y venerado debidamente como el Supremo solitario—entonces, aun entre esos principios, ha de realizarse que Él trasciende el Bindu, está más allá del Nāda y es todavía superior a la Śakti.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Role: liberating
It teaches that true worship culminates in realizing Śiva as niṣkala—transcending subtle principles like Bindu, Nāda, and even Śakti—pointing to liberation through knowledge and inner absorption in Pati (the Supreme Lord).
Invocation and worship may begin with saguna supports such as Liṅga and mantra, but the verse clarifies the goal: to recognize the worshipped Lord as ultimately beyond all manifesting powers and subtle stages, i.e., the niṣkala Śiva who is the source of them.
It implies mantra-japa with inward invocation (āvāhana) and meditation that moves from sound (nāda) and seed-point contemplation (bindu) to resting in the formless Lord—often supported in Shaiva practice by Panchakshara japa, vibhuti (tripuṇḍra), and steady dhyāna on Śiva as the Supreme.