Śivakṣetra–Tīrtha–Māhātmya
The Salvific Function of Shiva’s Sacred Domains
शिवलोकप्रदमिति शिवेनोक्तं तथा पुरा । यमुनाशोणयोः स्नायाद्गुरौ कन्यागते रवौ
śivalokapradamiti śivenoktaṃ tathā purā | yamunāśoṇayoḥ snāyādgurau kanyāgate ravau
Ainsi, jadis, Śiva lui-même déclara que cela confère le monde de Śiva. Qu’on se baigne au confluent de la Yamunā et de la Śoṇa lorsque Bṛhaspati (Jupiter) est en Kanyā (Vierge) et que le Soleil est entré en Kanyā—acte loué pour conduire l’âme vers la demeure de Śiva.
Suta Goswami (narrating Śiva’s earlier statement to the sages of Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Sthala Purana: Śiva’s prior declaration is invoked as pramāṇa (authoritative testimony) that the specified tīrtha-bath yields Śivaloka; the verse then prescribes a Virgo (Kanyā) configuration for bathing at the Yamunā–Śoṇa meeting, embedding tīrtha within jyotiṣa-kāla.
Significance: Time-qualified sangama-snānā is praised as leading toward Śivaloka; in Siddhānta, this is a grace-supported purification that can mature the paśu toward Śiva-oriented liberation.
Type: stotra
Cosmic Event: Astrological yoga: Guru in Kanyā (Virgo) and Ravi entering Kanyā (solar ingress) as an auspicious conjunction for snāna.
The verse extols a specific tīrtha-snāna (sacred bath) performed at an astrologically auspicious time as a Śiva-oriented purifier that supports liberation—culminating in attainment of Śivaloka through Śiva’s grace and accumulated merit turned toward devotion.
In the Shiva Purana, tīrtha practices are not isolated acts; they are meant to be performed with remembrance of Saguna Śiva—often alongside Liṅga-darśana, mantra-japa, and offering—so the external rite becomes inward devotion directed to the Lord who grants Śivaloka.
It suggests tīrtha-snāna at the Yamunā–Śoṇa confluence when Guru and Ravi are in Kanyā, ideally accompanied by Śiva-smaraṇa (remembrance), Panchākṣarī japa ("Om Namaḥ Śivāya"), and simple Śiva offerings after bathing.