Shloka 39

सुरभिर् जनयामास कश्यपादिति नः श्रुतम् मुनिर्मुनीनां च गणं गणमप्सरसां तथा

surabhir janayāmāsa kaśyapāditi naḥ śrutam munirmunīnāṃ ca gaṇaṃ gaṇamapsarasāṃ tathā

Kami mendengar bahwa Surabhī dari Kaśyapa melahirkan: seorang muni, sekelompok para muni, dan juga sekelompok Apsaras.

सुरभिःSurabhī (the divine cow)
सुरभिः:
जनयामासgave birth/produced
जनयामास:
कश्यपात्from Kaśyapa
कश्यपात्:
इतिthus
इति:
नःby us/to us
नः:
श्रुतम्heard/traditionally received
श्रुतम्:
मुनिःa sage
मुनिः:
मुनीनाम्of sages
मुनीनाम्:
and
:
गणम्a group/host
गणम्:
गणम्multitude/collection
गणम्:
अप्सरसाम्of Apsarases (celestial nymphs)
अप्सरसाम्:
तथाlikewise/also
तथा:

Suta Goswami

S
Surabhi
K
Kashyapa
M
Munis
A
Apsarases

FAQs

It situates Linga-centric Shaiva teaching within an ordered sṛṣṭi (creation) framework: by tracing sacred lineages, the Purana shows the cosmos as a regulated manifestation under Pati (Śiva), which supports the authority of Linga-pūjā within dharmic creation.

Indirectly: the verse catalogs emanations within creation, implying that all classes of beings—sages and celestial hosts—arise within the field governed by the Supreme Pati. In Shaiva Siddhānta terms, such beings are paśus functioning under divine ordinance, while Śiva remains the transcendent regulator.

No specific pūjā-vidhi or Pāśupata-yoga step is stated; the takeaway is scriptural grounding (śruti/smṛti-style “naḥ śrutam”) for lineage-based dharma that later supports disciplined worship and yogic restraint in the Shaiva path.