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Shloka 1

अलिङ्ग-लिङ्ग-निरूपणं तथा प्राकृत-सृष्टिवर्णनम्

सूत उवाच अलिङ्गो लिङ्गमूलं तु अव्यक्तं लिङ्गमुच्यते अलिङ्गः शिव इत्युक्तो लिङ्गं शैवमिति स्मृतम्

sūta uvāca aliṅgo liṅgamūlaṃ tu avyaktaṃ liṅgamucyate aliṅgaḥ śiva ityukto liṅgaṃ śaivamiti smṛtam

സൂതൻ പറഞ്ഞു—ലക്ഷണരഹിതമായത് (അലിംഗം) ലിംഗത്തിന്റെ മൂലമാണ്; അവ്യക്തം തന്നെയാണ് ലിംഗം എന്നു വിളിക്കപ്പെടുന്നത്. ശിവൻ ‘അലിംഗൻ’ എന്നു പ്രസിദ്ധൻ; ലിംഗം ശൈവചിഹ്നമായി സ്മരിക്കപ്പെടുന്നു.

सूत (sūta)Sūta (the narrator)
सूत (sūta):
उवाच (uvāca)said
उवाच (uvāca):
अलिङ्गः (aliṅgaḥ)without sign/mark, attributeless
अलिङ्गः (aliṅgaḥ):
लिङ्ग-मूलम् (liṅga-mūlam)the root/source of the Linga
लिङ्ग-मूलम् (liṅga-mūlam):
तु (tu)indeed
तु (tu):
अव्यक्तम् (avyaktam)unmanifest, subtle, beyond perception
अव्यक्तम् (avyaktam):
लिङ्गम् (liṅgam)sign, emblem
लिङ्गम् (liṅgam):
उच्यते (ucyate)is called
उच्यते (ucyate):
शिवः (śivaḥ)Lord Shiva, Pati (the Lord)
शिवः (śivaḥ):
इति (iti)thus
इति (iti):
उक्तः (uktaḥ)is declared
उक्तः (uktaḥ):
शैवम् (śaivam)pertaining to Shiva/Shaiva
शैवम् (śaivam):
स्मृतम् (smṛtam)is remembered/traditionally held
स्मृतम् (smṛtam):

Suta

S
Shiva

FAQs

It grounds Linga worship in metaphysics: the Linga points to the unmanifest root (avyakta) of reality—Shiva as Pati—making the emblem a support for devotion and inner realization rather than mere external symbolism.

Shiva is described as aliṅga—beyond marks, attributes, and limiting definitions—yet compassionately represented through the Shaiva Linga so bound souls (paśu) can approach the transcendent Pati.

It implies Linga-upāsanā and dhyāna: using the Linga as a meditative support to contemplate the avyakta Shiva, aligning with Pāśupata-oriented practice of turning the mind from the manifest to the attributeless Lord.