Adhyaya 44: Nandikesvara’s Manifestation and Abhisheka; The Rule of Namaskara in Shiva-Nama
दंष्ट्राकरालवदना नित्या बुद्धाश् च निर्मलाः कोटिकोटिगणैस्तुल्यैर् आत्मना च गणेश्वराः असंख्याता महात्मानस् तत्राजग्मुर्मुदा युताः
daṃṣṭrākarālavadanā nityā buddhāś ca nirmalāḥ koṭikoṭigaṇaistulyair ātmanā ca gaṇeśvarāḥ asaṃkhyātā mahātmānas tatrājagmurmudā yutāḥ
ໃບໜ້າດຸຮ້າຍ ມີຂຽວຟັນນ່າຢ້ານ ແຕ່ເປັນນິດທິຍະ—ຕື່ນຮູ້ ແລະບໍລິສຸດ—ບັນດາຄະນະເອສະວະເຫຼົ່ານັ້ນ ແຕ່ລະອົງໂດຍສະພາວະຂອງຕົນ ເທົ່າທຽມກັບຄະນະນັບໂກດິໂກດິ. ມະຫາອາດມາອັນຫາທີ່ສິ້ນສຸດບໍ່ໄດ້ ມາຮອດທີ່ນັ້ນດ້ວຍຄວາມປິຕິຍິນດີ।
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames the sacred environment around Śiva: linga-pūjā is not isolated devotion but participation in Śiva’s cosmic order (gaṇa-maṇḍala), where purified, awakened attendants gather to uphold the rite and its fruit.
By portraying Śiva’s gaṇeśvaras as both fearsome in form and stainless in consciousness, the verse reflects Śiva-tattva as transcending dualities—terrible to pāsas (bondage) yet pure awareness for the pashu seeking the Pati.
The verse implicitly supports Pāśupata orientation: cultivate nirmalatā (inner purity) and buddhitva (awakened discernment) so the practitioner (pashu) aligns with Śiva’s hosts—an inner gaṇa-sādhana accompanying external linga-pūjā.