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Shloka 27

विष्णुरुवाच—एकाक्षर-प्रणव-लिङ्ग-व्याप्ति-शिवस्तोत्रम्

शर्वाय च नमस्तुभ्यं सत्याय शमनाय च ब्रह्मणे चैव भूतानां सर्वज्ञाय नमो नमः

śarvāya ca namastubhyaṃ satyāya śamanāya ca brahmaṇe caiva bhūtānāṃ sarvajñāya namo namaḥ

ശർവ്വരൂപാ, നിനക്ക് നമസ്കാരം; സത്യരൂപാ, ശമനരൂപാ (ശാന്തിദാതാ) നിനക്ക് നമസ്കാരം. ഭൂതങ്ങളുടെ ബ്രഹ്മം, സർവ്വജ്ഞനായ പ്രഭുവേ, വീണ്ടും വീണ്ടും പ്രണാമം.

शर्वाय (śarvāya)to Śarva (Śiva, the destroyer/remover)
शर्वाय (śarvāya):
च (ca)and
च (ca):
नमः (namaḥ)salutations
नमः (namaḥ):
तुभ्यम् (tubhyam)to You
तुभ्यम् (tubhyam):
सत्याय (satyāya)to the Truth/Real
सत्याय (satyāya):
शमनाय (śamanāya)to the pacifier, the one who brings peace/cessation
शमनाय (śamanāya):
च (ca)and
च (ca):
ब्रह्मणे (brahmaṇe)to Brahman, the Absolute
ब्रह्मणे (brahmaṇe):
च एव (caiva)and indeed
च एव (caiva):
भूतानाम् (bhūtānām)of beings/creatures
भूतानाम् (bhūtānām):
सर्वज्ञाय (sarvajñāya)to the omniscient one
सर्वज्ञाय (sarvajñāya):
नमो नमः (namo namaḥ)repeated salutations
नमो नमः (namo namaḥ):

Suta Goswami (narrating a Shiva-stuti within the Linga Purana discourse)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames Linga-puja as worship of Pati (Shiva) not merely as a deity-form, but as Satya (ultimate Reality) and Brahman—the indwelling support of all bhūtas—so the act of offering becomes a direct approach to the Absolute.

Shiva is praised as Śarva (the remover of limitation), Satya (unchanging Reality), Śamana (the giver of peace/cessation of pasha-driven agitation), Brahman (the supreme ground), and Sarvajña (omniscient Pati who knows all pashus and their bonds).

The verse emphasizes mantra-japa and namaskāra as core limbs of devotion; inwardly it points to śamana—stilling the mind and loosening pasha—aligned with Pāśupata-oriented contemplation during Linga-puja.