आवरणपूजाविधानम् / The Procedure of Āvaraṇa (Enclosure) Worship
आलेपनं चन्दनं स्यान्मूलकाष्ठंरजोमयम् । कस्तूरिका कुंकुमं च रसो मृगमदात्मकः
ālepanaṃ candanaṃ syānmūlakāṣṭhaṃrajomayam | kastūrikā kuṃkumaṃ ca raso mṛgamadātmakaḥ
Pour l’ālepana, l’onguent sacré du culte de Śiva, le santal est prescrit—préparé en pâte avec la poudre de sa racine et de son bois de cœur. On peut aussi employer le musc et le safran; et l’essence parfumée est dite de la nature du mṛga-mada, le musc du cerf.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Vāyavīyasaṃhitā teachings to the sages at Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Significance: Gandha (fragrant unguent) signifies honoring the Lord as the supreme recipient of all rasas; disciplined sensory offerings become a means for the paśu to redirect desire into devotion and receive prasāda.
Role: nurturing
Offering: pushpa
It emphasizes śuddhi (purity) and bhakti (devotion) expressed through fragrant, sattvic offerings—symbolizing the devotee’s intent to consecrate body and mind to Pati (Śiva) while loosening pasha (bondage) through reverent worship.
Anointing the Śiva-liṅga with sandal paste and auspicious fragrances is a classic saguna upacāra (visible act of devotion). The fragrance signifies honoring Śiva’s manifest presence while remembering He remains transcendent beyond all substances.
Prepare chandan paste (ground from root/heartwood) and offer it as ālepana to the liṅga, ideally while japa of the Pañcākṣarī—“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”—maintaining a calm, pure, one-pointed mind.