मन्त्रसिद्धिः, प्रतिबन्धनिरासः, श्रद्धा-नियमाः
Mantra Efficacy, Removal of Obstacles, and the Role of Faith/Discipline
ज्वरोपशांतिदं क्षीरं सौभाग्यफलदं तथा । सर्वसिद्धिकरो होमः क्षौद्राज्यदधिभिर्युतैः
jvaropaśāṃtidaṃ kṣīraṃ saubhāgyaphaladaṃ tathā | sarvasiddhikaro homaḥ kṣaudrājyadadhibhiryutaiḥ
On dit que le lait procure l’apaisement de la fièvre et qu’il donne aussi le fruit de la bonne fortune. Le homa accompli avec miel, ghee et caillé—unis en oblation—devient un rite qui confère toute siddhi (accomplissement).
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Significance: Frames a shift from coercive rites to beneficent śānti/puṣṭi-oriented offerings; emphasizes healing (jvara-śānti) and sarva-siddhi as grace-aligned outcomes when ritually purified.
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: nurturing
Offering: naivedya
The verse highlights how specific, sattvic offerings—milk and a properly prepared homa with honey, ghee, and curd—support purification and harmony, making the devotee fit for Shiva’s grace; in Shaiva Siddhanta, such rites are aids that prepare the soul (paśu) to loosen bonds (pāśa) and turn toward the Lord (Pati).
Milk and homa-oblations are classic upacāras for Saguna Shiva worship: they honor Shiva’s manifest presence (especially in Linga-puja) through tangible offerings, while the inner intent remains surrender to Shiva as the supreme Pati who alone perfects all results.
It suggests performing a Shiva-oriented homa using oblations of honey (kṣaudra), ghee (ājya), and curd (dadhi), and offering milk as a sattvic substance; this can be paired with japa of the Panchakshara mantra ("Om Namaḥ Śivāya") to align outer rite with inner devotion.