Maṇḍala–Pūjā–Homa Krama
Maṇḍala Worship and Homa Sequence for the Disciple
जान्वंतं तदधो न्यस्येन्निवृत्तिं चानुचिंतयेत् । स्वबीजैस्सूत्रमंत्रं च न्यस्यां गैस्तं शिवात्मकम्
jānvaṃtaṃ tadadho nyasyennivṛttiṃ cānuciṃtayet | svabījaissūtramaṃtraṃ ca nyasyāṃ gaistaṃ śivātmakam
គាត់គួរដាក់ (មន្ត្រ) នៅជង្គង់ ហើយដាក់ក្រោមជង្គង់បន្តទៀត ហើយសមាធិលើតត្ត្វៈ «និវ្រឹត្តិ» (ការដកថយ)។ ដោយព្យាង្គគ្រាប់ពូជរបស់វាៗ គាត់គួរធ្វើញាសៈ ដាក់ «សូត្រមន្ត្រ» លើអវយវៈទាំងឡាយ ដោយដឹងថាការដាក់ទាំងមូលនេះមានសភាពជាព្រះសិវៈ។
Suta Goswami (narrating the Vāyavīya teachings to the sages at Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Īśāna
Mantra: (Not quoted explicitly) sūtra-mantra with svabīja-s (seed syllables) installed by aṅga-nyāsa; contemplation of Nivṛtti-tattva
Shakti Form: Durgā
Role: liberating
It teaches that mantra-nyāsa is not merely external ritual: by placing mantra on the body and contemplating Nivṛtti (withdrawal), the sādhaka turns awareness away from pāśa (bondage) and recognizes the body-mind field as pervaded by Pati—Śiva Himself.
Nyāsa prepares the worshipper to approach Saguna Śiva (including Liṅga worship) with a sanctified body and focused mind; the verse then bridges to the higher insight that the installed mantra and the worshipped form are śivātmaka—rooted in Śiva’s own reality.
It prescribes aṅga-nyāsa (placing mantra on limbs such as knees and below) along with steady contemplation of Nivṛtti; practically, it is a guided internalization of mantra-power (bīja and sūtra-mantra) to support japa and meditation.