वरुणश् च तथैवान्यः सुषेणः सेनजिच्छुभः तार्क्ष्यश्चारिष्टनेमिश् च क्षतजित् सत्यजित्तथा
varuṇaś ca tathaivānyaḥ suṣeṇaḥ senajicchubhaḥ tārkṣyaścāriṣṭanemiś ca kṣatajit satyajittathā
Ia adalah Varuṇa, dan juga ‘Anya’ (tiada bandingan); Ia adalah Suṣeṇa, Senajit, Yang Suci. Ia adalah Tārkṣya, Ariṣṭanemi, Kṣatajit, dan Satyajit—dengan nama-nama ini Pati (Maheśvara) dipuja.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva’s Sahasranama to the sages of Naimisharanya)
This verse is part of the Shiva-Sahasranama used in Linga-centered praise; reciting these names frames Shiva as Pati—the supreme ruler who protects cosmic order and removes pasha (bondage), making worship efficacious for the pashu (individual soul).
Shiva is presented as sovereign and transcendent (“anyaḥ”), auspicious (“śubhaḥ”), and invincible in dharma (“ariṣṭanemi”), who conquers harm and untruth (“kṣatajit”, “satyajit”). This aligns with Shaiva Siddhanta’s view of Shiva as Pati—free, all-governing, and the liberator.
Name-recitation (nāma-japa) and contemplative meditation on the epithets of Shiva—typical of Pashupata-oriented devotion—where the practitioner internalizes Shiva as the conqueror of inner armies (kleshas) and the establisher of satya.