Śiva-nāma-sahasraka-kathana
The Recital/Teaching of the Thousand Names of Śiva
अपराजितः सर्वसहो गोविंदः सत्त्ववाहनः । अधृतः स्वधृतः सिद्धः पूतमूर्तिर्यशोधनः
aparājitaḥ sarvasaho goviṃdaḥ sattvavāhanaḥ | adhṛtaḥ svadhṛtaḥ siddhaḥ pūtamūrtiryaśodhanaḥ
彼は不敗にして一切を堪え忍ぶ者、諸世界の守護者にして清浄なるサットヴァを担う者。何ものにも支えられず、しかも自らを支える。常に成就し、全く浄められた御姿をもち、聖なる名声を増し給う。
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Sthala Purana: No direct Jyotirliṅga linkage; the verse stresses Śiva’s self-subsistence (svadhṛta) and invincibility (aparājita), typical of universal-theology stuti rather than site-māhātmya.
Significance: Contemplation of Śiva as ‘adhṛta/svadhṛta’ supports vairāgya and śaraṇāgati: the devotee relies on the self-supported Lord rather than contingent supports.
Type: stotra
The verse praises Shiva as invincible and self-sustained (svadhṛta), indicating the Shaiva Siddhanta view of Pati (Shiva) as the independent Supreme who grants purity and spiritual attainment to the bound soul (paśu).
Such epithets are used in stotra-style worship of Saguna Shiva and the Jyotirlinga, where devotees contemplate Shiva’s qualities—purity, perfection, and lordship—while recognizing that the Linga points to the transcendent reality beyond all supports (adhṛta).
A practical takeaway is nāma-japa and nāma-archana: recite these names of Shiva with the Panchakshara mantra (Om Namaḥ Śivāya), offering bilva leaves and applying tripuṇḍra (bhasma) as a reminder of inner purity (pūtamūrti).