देवैर्विष्णोः शरणागमनम्—शिवलिङ्गस्थापनं, शिवसहस्रनामस्तवः, सुदर्शनचक्रप्रदानं च
विशिष्टः काश्यपो भानुर् भीमो भीमपराक्रमः प्रणवः सप्तधाचारो महाकायो महाधनुः
viśiṣṭaḥ kāśyapo bhānur bhīmo bhīmaparākramaḥ praṇavaḥ saptadhācāro mahākāyo mahādhanuḥ
ພຣະອົງແມ່ນຜູ້ວິເສດ; ກາສະຍະປະ; ດຸດດັ່ງພຣະອາທິດອັນສ່ອງໄສ; ຜູ້ນ່າຢ້ານດ້ວຍພະລັງອັນນ່າຢ້ານ. ພຣະອົງແມ່ນປຣະນະວະ (ໂອມ) ໂດຍພຣະອົງເອງ; ຈອມເຈົ້າຜູ້ມີຈັນຍາບັນເຈັດປະການ; ຜູ້ມີກາຍໃຫຍ່; ແລະຜູ້ຖືຄັນທະນູໃຫຍ່—ມະຫາເທວະ, ປະຕິຜູ້ຕັດຂາດປາສະທີ່ຜູກມັດປາຊຸ।
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva’s names to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It functions as a Sahasranama-style dhyāna: by reciting these epithets while worshipping the Linga, the devotee contemplates Shiva as Pati—radiant, awe-inspiring, and the primal Om—thereby loosening pāśas (bondages) that limit the paśu (individual soul).
Shiva is presented as both transcendent and immanent: the Pranava (source of mantra and consciousness), Bhānu (inner light that reveals truth), and Mahākāya (all-pervading magnitude), while also being Bhīma—His power that destroys ignorance and protects dharma.
Nāma-japa and Om-centered contemplation: meditating on Shiva as Praṇava and as the sevenfold-ordered Lord (saptadhācāra) aligns the practitioner with Pāśupata discipline—purifying conduct and directing awareness toward liberation.