गजाननपूजा तथा औपासन-होमविधिः
Worship of Gajānana and the Procedure of Aupāsana-Homa
ब्रह्माणं सचतुर्थ्यन्तं स्वाहांतान्प्रणवा दिकान् । संजप्य वाचयित्वाऽथ पुण्याहं च ततः परम्
brahmāṇaṃ sacaturthyantaṃ svāhāṃtānpraṇavā dikān | saṃjapya vācayitvā'tha puṇyāhaṃ ca tataḥ param
បន្ទាប់ពីបានសូត្រមន្តព្រហ្មាដែលបញ្ចប់ដោយចតុត្ថីវិភត្តិ ព្រមជាមួយអក្ខរៈដែលចាប់ផ្តើមដោយប្រណវៈ (ឱម) និងបញ្ចប់ដោយ "ស្វាហា" គាត់គប្បីឱ្យគេសូត្រតាមដែរ បន្ទាប់មកគាត់គប្បីឱ្យធ្វើពិធីប្រកាស "បុណ្យាហៈ" ដ៏មង្គល។
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva-Purana ritual procedure to the sages, within the Kailasa Samhita’s discourse)
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Īśāna
Sthala Purana: Ritual grammar: mantras framed by praṇava (Oṃ) and svāhā, plus the puṇyāha proclamation. No Jyotirliṅga narrative is present.
Significance: Puṇyāha functions as śuddhi (purificatory) and saṅkalpa-confirmation; in Siddhānta terms it helps loosen pāśa (impurity/obstruction) so kriyā can become fit for anugraha.
Mantra: oṃ … svāhā (framing indicated); vyāhṛti/gāyatrī complex implied by ‘praṇavādikān’ and homa context; puṇyāha-vācana follows.
Type: gayatri
It teaches that Shiva-worship begins with śuddhi (purification) and śubha-saṅkalpa (auspicious intent): mantra-japa, proper recitation, and the puṇyāha rite establish inner and outer fitness so devotion becomes a clear channel toward Śiva (Pati) in the Shaiva Siddhanta sense.
Before approaching the Śiva-liṅga as Saguna Śiva in formal pūjā, the practitioner sanctifies the space and mind through Praṇava-based mantras and puṇyāha—preliminaries that guard the worship from impurity and make the offering ‘fit’ (yogya) for the Lord.
Perform japa of Praṇava-linked mantras ending with ‘svāhā,’ have them properly recited by an officiant if needed, and then conduct the puṇyāha (auspicious purification) before commencing Shiva pūjā.