Praṇava-Māhātmya and the Twofold Mantra (Sūkṣma–Sthūla) in Śaiva Sādhanā
सूक्ष्ममेकाक्षरं विद्यात्स्थूलं पंचाक्षरं विदुः । सूक्ष्ममव्यक्तपंचार्णं सुव्यक्तार्णं तथेतरत्
sūkṣmamekākṣaraṃ vidyātsthūlaṃ paṃcākṣaraṃ viduḥ | sūkṣmamavyaktapaṃcārṇaṃ suvyaktārṇaṃ tathetarat
ចូរដឹងថា សូក្ស្ម (ល្អិត) គឺមន្តអក្សរតែមួយ—«ಓಂ / Oṁ»—ហើយ ស្ថូល (រឹង/ធំ) គឺមន្តប្រាំអក្សរ។ សូក្ស្មគឺសភាពប្រាំអក្សរដែលមិនបង្ហាញ (អវ្យក្ត) ខណៈដែលមន្តមួយទៀតគឺអក្សរដែលបង្ហាញច្បាស់ សម្រាប់ការបូជា។
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Tatpuruṣa
Mantra: oṃ (ekākṣara, praṇava) ; namaḥ śivāya (pañcākṣara)
Type: panchakshara
Role: teaching
It teaches that Shiva’s mantra has two levels: the subtle inner essence as Oṁ (praṇava) and the accessible manifest practice as the five-syllabled Namaḥ Śivāya—linking contemplation (sūkṣma) with devotional worship (sthūla).
The manifest syllabled form supports Saguna/Liṅga-oriented upāsanā through audible japa, while the subtle level points to Shiva as the unmanifest reality behind the same mantra—uniting form-based worship with inner realization.
Practice pañcākṣarī-japa (“Namaḥ Śivāya”) as the outward discipline, and cultivate inner absorption in praṇava (“Oṁ”) as the subtle contemplation—ideally alongside Shaiva observances like bhasma (tripuṇḍra) and Rudrākṣa as supportive aids.