Śiva-nāma-sahasraka-kathana
The Recital/Teaching of the Thousand Names of Śiva
अनिर्देश्यवपुः श्रीमान्सर्वाचार्यमनोगतिः । बहुश्रुतिर्महामायो नियतात्मा ध्रुवोऽध्रुवः
anirdeśyavapuḥ śrīmānsarvācāryamanogatiḥ | bahuśrutirmahāmāyo niyatātmā dhruvo'dhruvaḥ
Il est le Seigneur glorieux dont la forme ne peut être définie ; Il est le but intérieur qui guide tous les maîtres et toutes les disciplines sacrées. Il est l’essence des multiples révélations védiques, le détenteur de la Grande Māyā ; maître de Lui-même et parfaitement établi—et pourtant, dans Sa līlā, Il est à la fois la Réalité immuable et Celui qui paraît changeant.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva’s glory to the sages of Naimisharanya)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
Type: stotra
Role: teaching
It teaches that Shiva is ultimately beyond description (nirguṇa in essence) while also manifesting through Māyā as the perceivable Lord (saguṇa for grace). Realization comes by seeing Him as both the unchanging ground of being and the compassionate presence within changing experience.
The Linga is a sacred support for contemplating the indescribable Shiva: it points beyond form while allowing devotion to a manifest focus. The verse affirms that all authentic teachings culminate in Him, so Linga worship becomes a disciplined doorway from form to the formless.
Meditate on Shiva as ‘dhruva’ (unchanging) while chanting the Panchakshara—Om Namaḥ Śivāya—seeing all changing thoughts as ‘adhruva’ appearances in His Māyā; steady the mind with simple japa and inner restraint (niyatātmā).