प्रसाद-ज्ञान-योग-मोक्षक्रमः तथा व्यास-रुद्रावतार-मन्वन्तर-परम्परा
महाकायमुनिः शूली दण्डी मुण्डीश्वरः स्वयम् सहिष्णुः सोमशर्मा च नकुलीशो जगद्गुरुः
mahākāyamuniḥ śūlī daṇḍī muṇḍīśvaraḥ svayam sahiṣṇuḥ somaśarmā ca nakulīśo jagadguruḥ
वह महाकायमुनि—महादेह वाले मुनि; शूली—त्रिशूलधारी; दण्डी—दण्ड धारण करने वाले तपस्वी; मुण्डीश्वर—मुण्डित-व्रती संन्यासी-रूप प्रभु; और स्वयं—स्वयम्भू हैं। वह सहिष्णु—सदा क्षमाशील; सोमशर्मा—सोम से संबद्ध शुभस्वरूप; तथा नकुलीश—जगत्गुरु हैं, जो पशु को पाश से पार कराते हैं।
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva’s epithets/manifestations to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It functions as a dhyāna-style naming of Shiva’s ascetic and guru forms—supporting linga-pūjā by fixing the devotee’s mind on Shiva as Pati, the supreme teacher who grants release from pāśa (bondage) to the paśu (soul).
Shiva is presented as svayam (self-existent) and jagad-guru (world-teacher): transcendent yet accessible through yogic/ascetic manifestations, guiding souls from limitation to liberation.
The verse highlights Pāśupata-oriented renunciation and yogic discipline—symbolized by the trident and staff—implying mantra-japa, dhyāna on Shiva’s guru-form (Nakulīśa), and tapas as supports to linga-upāsanā.