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Shloka 8

स्नानविधिः — गायत्र्यावाहन, सूर्यवन्दन, तर्पण, पञ्चमहायज्ञ, भस्मस्नान, मन्त्रस्नान

आत्मानं चान्तरात्मानं परमात्मानमेव च अभिवन्द्य पुनः सूर्यं ब्रह्माणं च विभावसुम्

ātmānaṃ cāntarātmānaṃ paramātmānameva ca abhivandya punaḥ sūryaṃ brahmāṇaṃ ca vibhāvasum

ആദ്യം ആത്മാവിനെയും അന്തരാത്മാവിനെയും പരമാത്മാവിനെയും നമസ്കരിച്ച്, പിന്നെ വീണ്ടും സൂര്യനെയും ബ്രഹ്മാവിനെയും വിഭാവസു (അഗ്നി)യെയും അഭിവന്ദനം ചെയ്യണം।

ātmānamthe self/one’s own self
ātmānam:
caand
ca:
antar-ātmānamthe indwelling self (inner witness)
antar-ātmānam:
paramātmānam evathe Supreme Self alone (Pati as the highest principle)
paramātmānam eva:
abhivandyahaving saluted/bowed to
abhivandya:
punaḥagain/thereafter
punaḥ:
sūryamthe Sun-god (Sūrya)
sūryam:
brahmāṇamBrahmā (the creator, Vedic lord of rites)
brahmāṇam:
caand
ca:
vibhāvasumVibhāvasu, Agni (sacrificial fire, illuminer)
vibhāvasum:

Suta Goswami (narrating ritual sequence within the Purva-Bhaga narrative)

S
Surya
B
Brahma
A
Agni

FAQs

It establishes the orthodox preparatory order: inner salutation (self–inner self–Supreme Self) followed by reverence to Sūrya, Brahmā, and Agni—purifying the worshipper and sanctifying the rite before approaching the Linga.

By invoking the Supreme Self (paramātman) after the self and inner self, the verse implies a hierarchy where the pashu’s awareness turns inward and culminates in the recognition of Pati as the highest reality—transcendent yet immanent as the inner witness.

A combined discipline: interior recollection (antarātma-smṛti akin to yogic centering) together with Vedic upacāra—honouring Sūrya (illumination), Brahmā (ritual order), and Agni (sacrificial purity) as a prelude to Shaiva worship.