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Shloka 53

Shivamurti–Pratishtha Phala: Shivalaya-Nirmana, Kshetra-Mahatmya, Tirtha-Snana, and Mandala-Vidhi

वापीकूपतडागाश् च शिवतीर्था इति स्मृताः स्नात्वा तेषु नरो भक्त्या तीर्थेषु द्विजसत्तमाः

vāpīkūpataḍāgāś ca śivatīrthā iti smṛtāḥ snātvā teṣu naro bhaktyā tīrtheṣu dvijasattamāḥ

おお二度生まれの最勝者よ、井戸・階段井戸・池は、シヴァのティールタ(聖なる沐浴処)として記憶される。人がそれらのティールタでバクティをもって沐浴するなら、シヴァの恩寵に近づき、パシュ(個我の魂)を縛るパーシャ(束縛)をゆるめ、心をパティ—主なるシヴァ—へと向ける。

vāpīstepwell/reservoir
vāpī:
kūpawell
kūpa:
taḍāgāḥponds/tanks
taḍāgāḥ:
caand
ca:
śiva-tīrthāḥShiva’s sacred fords/pilgrimage-waters
śiva-tīrthāḥ:
itithus
iti:
smṛtāḥare remembered/declared
smṛtāḥ:
snātvāhaving bathed
snātvā:
teṣuin those
teṣu:
naraḥa man/person
naraḥ:
bhaktyāwith devotion
bhaktyā:
tīrtheṣuin the sacred places/waters
tīrtheṣu:
dvija-sattamāḥO best of the twice-born (Brahmin sages).
dvija-sattamāḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It expands Shiva-bhakti beyond temple ritual by declaring even common water-sources as Shiva-tīrthas; bathing with devotion becomes an act of Shiva-oriented purification supporting Linga worship.

Shiva is implied as Pati—the Lord whose grace can be accessed through bhakti; sacredness is not merely geographic but arises from devotion that turns the pashu toward Shiva and away from pāśa (bondage).

Tīrtha-snana (devotional bathing) is highlighted as a purificatory upacāra that steadies the mind for Shaiva discipline—supporting Pashupata-style inner purification through outward sacred observance.