HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 34Shloka 13
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Vamana Purana — Shiva's Kedara Tirtha, Shloka 13

Shiva’s Kedara-Tirtha and the Rise of Mura: From Shaiva Pilgrimage to Vaishnava Theology

षण्मासाद् धारयिष्न्ति निवृत्ताः परपाकतः तेषां हृत्पङ्कजेष्वेव मल्लिङ्गं भविता ध्रुवम्

ṣaṇmāsād dhārayiṣnti nivṛttāḥ parapākataḥ teṣāṃ hṛtpaṅkajeṣveva malliṅgaṃ bhavitā dhruvam

រយៈពេលប្រាំមួយខែ ពួកគេនឹងរក្សាវិន័យនោះ ដោយបោះបង់ការចូលរួមក្នុង «ការចម្អិន/ការធ្វើឲ្យទុំ» នៃអាហាររបស់អ្នកដទៃ; ហើយក្នុងផ្កាឈូកនៃបេះដូងរបស់ពួកគេ លិង្គដ៏គ្មានមលិនឹងបង្ហាញខ្លួនយ៉ាងប្រាកដ។

(Contextual frame) A narrator-sage continues the tirtha’s phalaśruti to an inquirer (exact interlocutors not supplied in the excerpt).
Shiva (implied by liṅga symbolism)
Tirtha MahimaVratācāra (observance of vows)Āhāra-niyama (dietary restraint)Antar-liṅga (internalization of Shiva)Purity (mala-śuddhi)

{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

It commonly signals a discipline of food-restraint: refraining from eating food cooked by others (parapāka), or avoiding dependence on others’ provisions—an ascetic/vrata-like conduct that preserves ritual purity after drinking the tirtha-water.

As ‘mala-rahita liṅga’—a spotless liṅga. The point is not a physical stone liṅga appearing, but the assured manifestation of Shiva’s liṅga-principle as inner realization in the heart-lotus.

Māhātmya texts often quantify merit through time-bound observances. Here, the tirtha-water initiates a sustained period of purity/discipline, culminating in inner spiritual fruition (liṅga in the heart).