कुमाराभिषेकवर्णनम् — Description of Kumāra’s Abhiṣeka
Consecration/Installation
पुत्रं निरीक्ष्य च तदा जगदेकबंधुः प्रीत्यान्वितः परमया परया भवान्या । स्नेहान्वितो भुजगभोगयुतो हि साक्षात्सर्वेश्वरः परिवृतः प्रमथैः परेशः
putraṃ nirīkṣya ca tadā jagadekabaṃdhuḥ prītyānvitaḥ paramayā parayā bhavānyā | snehānvito bhujagabhogayuto hi sākṣātsarveśvaraḥ parivṛtaḥ pramathaiḥ pareśaḥ
Alors, voyant le fils, l’unique véritable parent des mondes—le Seigneur Śiva Lui-même, le Suprême—fut rempli de la joie la plus haute avec Bhavānī. Débordant d’affection parentale, paré du serpent comme ornement sacré et entouré de ses serviteurs Pramatha, le Maître de tout se révéla, bienveillant, en sa forme manifeste.
Sūta Gosvāmī (narrating to the sages at Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Umāpati
Type: stotra
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: nurturing
It reveals Śiva as jagad-eka-bandhu—the intimate protector of all beings—showing that the Supreme (Pati) is not remote, but lovingly present and responsive in His manifest (saguṇa) grace, a key bhakti-oriented thrust of the Purāṇa.
The verse explicitly presents Śiva “in person” (sākṣāt) with recognizable marks—serpent-ornament and gaṇa attendants—supporting saguṇa upāsanā. In Śaiva understanding, the Liṅga is the stable, worshipful sign of that same Lord who also appears in compassionate personal form for devotees.
A practical takeaway is saguṇa dhyāna: meditate on Śiva with His traditional emblems (serpent ornament, gaṇas) while repeating the Pañcākṣarī “Om Namaḥ Śivāya,” cultivating snehabhāva (loving devotion) toward the Lord who cares for the worlds.