शिवतत्त्वे परापरभावविचारः
Inquiry into Śiva’s Principle and the Parā–Aparā Paradox
स्वभावो विपरीतश्चेत्स्वतंत्रः स्वेच्छया यदि । न करोति किमीशानो नित्यानित्यविपर्ययम्
svabhāvo viparītaścetsvataṃtraḥ svecchayā yadi | na karoti kimīśāno nityānityaviparyayam
បើស្វಭាវៈរបស់ព្រះអម្ចាស់ផ្ទុយទៅវិញ ហើយព្រះអង្គឯករាជ្យធ្វើតាមចិត្តឆន្ទៈផ្ទាល់ តើហេតុអ្វីព្រះឥសានៈដ៏អធិបតី មិនបំផ្លាញឬបង្វែរលំដាប់នៃអស់កល្ប និងអនិច្ចទេ?
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Īśāna
Role: teaching
It argues that Shiva’s sovereignty is not arbitrary: His freedom operates through His consistent, auspicious nature, preserving the right order between the eternal (nitya) and the transient (anitya), which supports a dependable path to liberation.
Linga worship approaches Shiva as the stable ground of reality and dharma; this verse reinforces that the Lord is not capricious, so devotion to Saguna Shiva (as Ishana) and the Linga is trust in a steady, grace-bestowing Lord who maintains cosmic order.
Steady japa of the Panchakshara mantra “Om Namaḥ Śivāya” with a disciplined, non-whimsical mind—optionally supported by Tripuṇḍra (bhasma) and Rudrākṣa—aligns the devotee with Shiva’s ordered, liberating grace.