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Shloka 38

Adhyaya 44: Nandikesvara’s Manifestation and Abhisheka; The Rule of Namaskara in Shiva-Nama

ततो गणाधिपाः सर्वे ततो देवास्ततो ऽसुराः एवं स्तुतश्चाभिषिक्तो देवैः सब्रह्मकैस्तदा

tato gaṇādhipāḥ sarve tato devāstato 'surāḥ evaṃ stutaścābhiṣikto devaiḥ sabrahmakaistadā

ಆಗ ಎಲ್ಲಾ ಗಣಾಧಿಪತಿಗಳು, ನಂತರ ದೇವರುಗಳು, ನಂತರ ಅಸುರರೂ ಸಹ ಅವರನ್ನು ಸ್ತುತಿಸಿದರು. ಹೀಗೆ ಸ್ತುತಿಸಲ್ಪಟ್ಟ ಅವರನ್ನು, ಆಗ ಬ್ರಹ್ಮನೊಡನೆ ದೇವರುಗಳು ಅಭಿಷೇಕಿಸಿದರು।

tataḥthen/thereupon
tataḥ:
gaṇa-adhipāḥleaders of the gaṇas (attendant hosts)
gaṇa-adhipāḥ:
sarveall
sarve:
tataḥthen
tataḥ:
devāḥthe gods
devāḥ:
tataḥthen
tataḥ:
asurāḥthe asuras
asurāḥ:
evamthus/in this manner
evam:
stutaḥpraised/eulogized
stutaḥ:
caand
ca:
abhiṣiktaḥanointed (with ritual consecration)
abhiṣiktaḥ:
devaiḥby the gods
devaiḥ:
sa-brahmakaiḥalong with Brahmā (and Brahmā’s presence)
sa-brahmakaiḥ:
tadāat that time.
tadā:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva
G
Ganas
D
Devas
A
Asuras
B
Brahma

FAQs

It frames stuti (praise) and abhiṣeka (ritual anointing) as universal acts of surrender to Shiva—performed by Gaṇas, Devas, and even Asuras—supporting the Purāṇic basis for Linga-abhisheka as a primary Shaiva upāsanā.

Shiva is implied as the supreme Pati who receives worship across cosmic factions; the shared praise and consecration indicate His transcendence over deva/asura dualities and His lordship that subdues pasha (bondage) through devotion.

Abhiṣeka is highlighted—ritual consecration/anointing—paired with stuti; in a Pāśupata-oriented reading, it reflects bhakti and śaraṇāgati as preparatory disciplines that purify the paśu (individual soul) toward Shiva’s grace.