Śiva-nāma-smaraṇa and Śambhu’s Protective Manifestation
Dāruka Episode
सूत उवाच । निषधे सुंदरे देशे क्षत्रियाणां कुले च सः । महासेनसुतो वीरसेनश्चैव शिवप्रियः
sūta uvāca | niṣadhe suṃdare deśe kṣatriyāṇāṃ kule ca saḥ | mahāsenasuto vīrasenaścaiva śivapriyaḥ
Sūta dit : Dans la belle contrée de Niṣadha, au sein d’une lignée de kṣatriya, vivait un homme nommé Vīrasena, fils de Mahāsena, particulièrement cher au Seigneur Śiva (dévot de Śiva).
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
Sthala Purana: Introductory narrative frame: Sūta establishes the human devotee (Vīrasena) whose tapas and Śiva-bhakti will lead to a Jyotirliṅga-related revelation later in the episode.
Significance: Sets the paradigm of the kṣatriya-bhakta whose dharma and devotion qualify him for Śiva’s direct grace (anugraha) later.
The verse introduces Vīrasena as “śiva-priya,” highlighting that spiritual worth is measured by devotion to Pati (Śiva) rather than by mere birth or status—an entry point to the Kotirudra narrative where grace and pilgrimage-centered bhakti lead toward liberation.
Kotirudrasaṃhitā commonly frames Śiva’s accessible, Saguna compassion through Jyotirliṅga accounts; calling Vīrasena ‘dear to Śiva’ signals a devotee suited to Liṅga-upāsanā—reverence, service, and faith directed to Śiva’s manifest form for receiving anugraha (grace).
While no specific rite is named in this single verse, the implied takeaway is steady Śiva-bhakti: daily remembrance with the Pañcākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”), and—consistent with Kotirudra themes—Liṅga worship and pilgrimage-oriented vrata practice, especially during Mahāśivarātri.