हिरण्याय महेशाय श्रीकण्ठाय नमोनमः भस्मदिग्धशरीराय दण्डमुण्डीश्वराय च
hiraṇyāya maheśāya śrīkaṇṭhāya namonamaḥ bhasmadigdhaśarīrāya daṇḍamuṇḍīśvarāya ca
幾度も幾度もマハーデーヴァに礼拝する。黄金なる大主、吉祥の喉をもつシュリーカṇṭハよ。聖灰バスマを身に塗り、杖を持ち頭を剃る修行者たちの主ダンダムンディーイーシュヴァラにも礼拝する。
Suta Goswami (narrating a traditional Shiva-stuti within the Linga Purana discourse)
It frames Linga-puja as devotion to Pati (Maheshvara) through nāma-japa and namaskāra, emphasizing purity and dispassion symbolized by bhasma—turning the worshipper (paśu) away from pasha (bondage) toward Shiva.
Shiva is praised as radiant and sovereign (hiraṇya, Mahēśa) yet also the supreme renunciate (bhasma-smeared), indicating transcendence of worldly identifications while remaining the compassionate Lord who governs and liberates.
Bhasma-dhāraṇa (smearing sacred ash) and the ascetic discipline associated with staff-bearing, shaven-headed renunciants—markers aligned with Pāśupata-oriented vairāgya and worship through mantra and prostration.