ज्योतिर्लिङ्ग-तदुपलिङ्ग-माहात्म्यवर्णनम्
Narration of the Greatness of the Jyotirliṅga and Associated Liṅgas
केदारेश्वरसंजातं भूतेशं यमुना तटे । महापापहरं प्रोक्तं पश्यतामर्चतान्तथा
kedāreśvarasaṃjātaṃ bhūteśaṃ yamunā taṭe | mahāpāpaharaṃ proktaṃ paśyatāmarcatāntathā
ヤムナー河畔には、ケーダレーシュヴァラとして現れたブーテーシャがある。それは、拝観し、また礼拝する者にとって、甚大な罪さえも滅すると宣言されている。
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
Jyotirlinga: Kedāranātha
Sthala Purana: The verse identifies Bhūteśa on the Yamunā bank as ‘arisen as Kedāreśvara’, reflecting a Kedāra-manifestation motif. While the canonical Kedāranātha is Himalayan, this passage suggests a Kedāra-nāma/manifestation associated with Yamunā-side sacred geography in this catalog.
Significance: Mahā-pāpa-hara: darśana plus arcana are both efficacious—seeing (darśana) initiates grace, worship (arcana) deepens it, culminating in karmic attenuation (pāśa-kṣaya).
Offering: pushpa
It teaches that Śiva’s saguna presence as Kedāreśvara/Bhūteśa at a sacred tīrtha grants powerful purification: darśana (seeing with devotion) and arcana (ritual worship) are said to destroy even grave sins, preparing the soul for liberation under Pati (Śiva).
Kedāreśvara is invoked as a manifest form of Śiva associated with a holy locale; the verse emphasizes saguna upāsanā—approaching Śiva through tangible presence (tīrtha/linga), receiving darśana, and performing arcana as a direct means of grace.
Perform darśana and arcana: offer water (especially at a river-tīrtha), bilva leaves, and repeat the Panchākṣarī mantra “Om Namaḥ Śivāya” with repentance and devotion, understanding Śiva as the remover of mahāpāpa.