Indra’s Account: Shilada’s Tapas and Shiva’s Manifestation as Nandi
तस्मान्नन्दय मां नन्दिन् नमामि जगदीश्वरम् प्रसीद पितरौ मे ऽद्य रुद्रलोकं गतौ विभो
tasmānnandaya māṃ nandin namāmi jagadīśvaram prasīda pitarau me 'dya rudralokaṃ gatau vibho
それゆえ、ナンディンよ、我を喜ばせてください。我は世主ジャガディーシュヴァラ、諸世界の主に礼拝します。慈悲を垂れたまえ、威力自在なるヴィブーよ。今日、我が両親はルドラの界へと赴いたのです。
A devotee/supplicant addressing Nandin and Shiva (narrated within Suta’s discourse)
It frames Linga-oriented Shaiva devotion as surrender to Jagadīśvara (Shiva as Pati) mediated by Nandin, emphasizing that Shiva’s anugraha can elevate the pashu (soul) and even one’s lineage toward Rudraloka.
Shiva is invoked as Jagadīśvara and Vibhu—supreme, all-pervading Lord—whose grace governs the soul’s movement beyond pasha (bondage) toward his own realm, highlighting Shiva-tattva as the ultimate refuge and liberator.
The key practice is bhakti-yukta praṇāma (devotional prostration) and supplication for prasāda (grace); it aligns with Pāśupata orientation where surrender and Shiva’s favor are central to loosening pasha and attaining higher lokas.