पार्थिवप्रतिमापूजाविधानम्
Pārthiva-pratimā Pūjā-vidhāna — Procedure for Worship of an Earthen Icon
प्रणवं ध्वनिलिंगं तु नादलिंगं स्वयंभुवः । बिंदुलिंगं तु यंत्रं स्यान्मकारं तु प्रतिष्ठितम्
praṇavaṃ dhvaniliṃgaṃ tu nādaliṃgaṃ svayaṃbhuvaḥ | biṃduliṃgaṃ tu yaṃtraṃ syānmakāraṃ tu pratiṣṭhitam
Le Praṇava « Oṁ » est le Liṅga en tant que son (dhvani) ; il est le Liṅga en tant que résonance intérieure (nāda), auto-manifesté. Le bindu est le Liṅga comme point sacré, à contempler comme un yantra ; et la syllabe « ma » est établie comme son ferme appui dans la consécration (pratiṣṭhā).
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva’s doctrine to the sages of Naimisharanya)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Sthala Purana: Not a site-legend; it is a doctrinal mapping of liṅga as sound (dhvani), inner resonance (nāda), point-source (bindu) and yantra—an interior ‘jyoti’ theology rather than a geographic jyotirliṅga account.
Significance: Reframes pilgrimage inward: the true ‘Mahāliṅga’ is apprehended as praṇava, nāda, and bindu—guiding the devotee from external symbol to subtle realization.
Mantra: ॐ (praṇava) — analyzed as dhvani/nāda/bindu
Type: gayatri
Role: teaching
It identifies Shiva’s Liṅga not only as a physical emblem but as the subtle reality of Praṇava (Om), nāda (inner vibration), and bindu (source-point), guiding the seeker from outer worship to inward contemplation aligned with Shaiva Siddhanta’s focus on Shiva as the supreme Pati.
It connects Saguna Liṅga worship with its subtle counterparts—sound (dhvani), inner nāda, and bindu—showing that external Liṅga-pūjā is supported by mantra and contemplative awareness of Shiva’s presence as the self-manifest spiritual principle.
Japa and dhyāna on Om (Praṇava) with attention to nāda and bindu—often supported by yantra-style visualization—are implied as inner practices that complement Liṅga worship, especially during intensified observances like Mahāśivarātri.