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Shloka 124

ध्यानयोगेन रुद्रदर्शनम् — रुद्रावतार-परिवर्तक्रमः, लकुली (कायावतार), पाशुपतयोगः, लिङ्गार्चन-निष्ठा

प्राप्य माहेश्वरं योगं रुद्रलोकं ततो गताः अष्टाविंशे पुनः प्राप्ते परिवर्ते क्रमागते

prāpya māheśvaraṃ yogaṃ rudralokaṃ tato gatāḥ aṣṭāviṃśe punaḥ prāpte parivarte kramāgate

മാഹേശ്വരയോഗം പ്രാപിച്ച് അവർ പിന്നീട് രുദ്രലോകത്തിലേക്ക് പോയി; ക്രമമായി ഇരുപത്തെട്ടാം പരിഭർത്തം (കല്പചക്രം) വീണ്ടും വന്നപ്പോൾ, അതും അവർ വീണ്ടും പ്രാപിച്ചു।

prāpyahaving attained
prāpya:
māheśvaram yogamthe Yoga of Maheshvara (Pāśupata discipline leading to Pati-realization)
māheśvaram yogam:
rudralokamRudra’s world/realm
rudralokam:
tataḥthereafter
tataḥ:
gatāḥthey went
gatāḥ:
aṣṭāviṃśein the twenty-eighth
aṣṭāviṃśe:
punaḥagain
punaḥ:
prāptewhen it had arrived/been reached
prāpte:
parivartein the cycle/turning (of time, yuga-kalpa rotation)
parivarte:
kramāgatehaving come in sequence, in due order
kramāgate:

Suta Goswami

S
Shiva
R
Rudra
M
Maheshvara

FAQs

It frames Linga-centered devotion as leading to Māheśvara (Pāśupata) Yoga—where the Pashu (soul) turns from Pāśa (bondage) toward Pati (Shiva)—culminating in access to Rudraloka and repeated attainment across cosmic cycles.

Shiva is indicated as Maheshvara and Rudra—the supreme Pati who grants yogic attainment and a transcendent realm beyond ordinary karmic destinations, governing time’s cycles while remaining the liberating principle within them.

Māheśvara Yoga (Pāśupata-oriented discipline): a Shaiva path of inner absorption and devotion that results in Rudra-realization and entry into Rudra’s loka, implying liberation-oriented practice rather than mere merit-based ritual.