अग्नियज्ञ-देवयज्ञ-ब्रह्मयज्ञ-गुरुपूजा-क्रमनिरूपणम् / Ordering and Definitions of Agniyajña, Devayajña, Brahmayajña, and Guru-Pūjā
तिथिनक्षत्रयोगे च तत्तद्देवप्रपूजने । आदिवारादिवारेषु सर्वज्ञो जगदीश्वरः
tithinakṣatrayoge ca tattaddevaprapūjane | ādivārādivāreṣu sarvajño jagadīśvaraḥ
En las observancias ligadas a los tithi, las constelaciones (nakṣatra) y los yogas auspiciosos; y en la adoración debida a las deidades respectivas en sus ocasiones y días de la semana, como el domingo y los demás—es Jagadīśvara, el Omnisciente Señor del universo (Śiva), quien en verdad está presente como regente interior y otorgador de cumplimiento.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Īśāna
Sthala Purana: Not tied to a Jyotirliṅga; it asserts Śiva (Jagadīśvara) as sarvajña and the true inner governor across tithi/nakṣatra/yoga-based observances and weekday deity-worship.
Significance: Reorients astrological/temporal observances: regardless of the ‘respective deity’ of a day or constellation, Śiva is the ultimate fulfiller—encouraging devotees to see unity behind ritual plurality.
Role: teaching
Offering: pushpa
Cosmic Event: Calendrical/astrological observance framework (tithi–nakṣatra–yoga; weekday cycles).
It teaches that all calendar-based rites—tithi, nakshatra, yoga, and weekday worship—ultimately reach Śiva, the all-knowing Jagadīśvara, who stands as the indwelling Lord behind every sacred occasion.
Even when devotees worship different deities according to specific days and astrological timings, the Shiva Purana frames Śiva as the supreme Lord; Linga/Saguna worship is a direct way of approaching that Jagadīśvara who empowers all such rites.
Perform worship with proper timing (tithi/nakshatra/yoga/weekday) while centering the intention on Śiva—e.g., japa of the Panchākṣarī “Om Namaḥ Śivāya” alongside regular pūjā—recognizing Him as the inner recipient of all devotion.