नरकयातनावर्णनम् / Description of Hell-Torments for Specific Transgressions
क्षुधार्तमतिथिं सम्यगेकग्रामनिवासिनम् । भोजयेत्तं शुभान्नेन यथाशक्त्यात्मभोजनात्
kṣudhārtamatithiṃ samyagekagrāmanivāsinam | bhojayettaṃ śubhānnena yathāśaktyātmabhojanāt
飢えに苦しむ客—とりわけ同じ村に住む相応に敬うべき者—が来たなら、力の及ぶかぎり、清らかで吉祥なる食をもって饗し、自らの食分からであっても施すべきである。
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva Purana teachings to the sages at Naimisharanya, as typical of the Purana’s discourse style)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Umāpati
Sthala Purana: Not a Jyotirliṅga story; it teaches atithi-sevā as dharma that supports Śiva’s grace—seeing the guest as a carrier of merit and as a test of the householder’s purity.
Significance: Hospitality as Śiva-bhakti in action: feeding the hungry guest accrues puṇya and purifies the paśu’s mala through compassionate conduct.
Shakti Form: Annapūrṇā
Role: nurturing
Offering: naivedya
It teaches that compassionate service—especially feeding the hungry guest—is a dharmic act that purifies the heart (antaḥkaraṇa) and loosens the bonds of pāśa (karmic limitation), aligning the devotee with Shiva’s grace (anugraha).
In Shaiva practice, external worship (liṅga-pūjā) is fulfilled by inner worship expressed as mercy and generosity; feeding a hungry guest becomes a living offering (naivedya in action) to Saguna Shiva present in beings.
Practice atithi-seva as a vrata: before or after liṅga-pūjā (and especially on Mahāśivarātri), offer food to the hungry according to capacity, while mentally dedicating the act to Shiva and repeating the Pañcākṣarī mantra.