Adhyaya 61 — ग्रह-नक्षत्र-स्थाननिर्णयः
Cosmic Abodes of Luminaries and the Shaiva Order of Time
द्विगुणः सूर्यविस्ताराद् विस्तारः शशिनः स्मृतः तुल्यस्तयोस्तु स्वर्भानुर् भूत्वाधस्तात्प्रसर्पति
dviguṇaḥ sūryavistārād vistāraḥ śaśinaḥ smṛtaḥ tulyastayostu svarbhānur bhūtvādhastātprasarpati
月の広がりは、太陽の直径の二倍であると教えられる。スヴァルバーヌ(Svarbhānu、ラーフ)は両者と等しい量となって、その下を滑るように進み—食の因となる。この秩序ある宇宙において、主(パティ)ただ一者のみが至上の統御者として在し、光明体とグラハ(惑星)は量られた運行の絆(pāśa)のうちに働く。
Suta Goswami (narrating traditional cosmology to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames the cosmos as a measured, law-governed order; in Linga worship this supports the insight that Shiva as Pati is the unseen regulator behind all visible movements, so the devotee turns from changing phenomena to the steadfast Linga-principle.
Indirectly: by describing fixed proportions and ordained motion, it implies a transcendent governor beyond the grahas—Shiva-tattva as Pati, the supreme intelligence that upholds niyati (cosmic order) while remaining untouched by it.
Not a direct puja-vidhi verse; the takeaway aligns with Pashupata discipline—cultivating steadiness and detachment by contemplating cosmic order, especially during eclipses as times for japa, Shiva-dhyana, and restraint.