Upamanyu’s Tapas, Shiva’s Indra-Form Test, and the Bestowal of Kshiroda and Gaṇapatya
आज्योदनार्णवश्चैव फललेह्यार्णवस् तथा अपूपगिरयश्चैव भक्ष्यभोज्यार्णवः पुनः
ājyodanārṇavaścaiva phalalehyārṇavas tathā apūpagirayaścaiva bhakṣyabhojyārṇavaḥ punaḥ
まことに、ギーを混ぜた飯の海、果実の海、甘き練り菓子(レーヒャ)の海があり、供物の菓子(アプーパ)の山々がある。さらに、食すべきものと煮炊きして供えるもの—あらゆる食物の海があり、それらは布施と礼拝の功徳の果として顕れる。
Suta Goswami
It presents the vast abundance produced by offerings and charity connected to Shiva-puja—especially food and naivedya—showing that sincere giving in the Lord’s worship yields expansive merit (punya) and supportive conditions for spiritual progress.
While the verse lists the fruits of merit as abundant divine enjoyments, Shaiva Siddhanta reads this as Shiva (Pati) granting regulated bhoga to the pashu, gradually loosening pasha; the abundance is a sign of His lordship and grace, not the final goal itself.
It highlights annadana and naivedya—offering ghee, rice, sweets, fruits, and prepared foods in Shiva worship—supporting purification of the devotee and accumulation of punya that can be directed toward higher sadhana.