Shloka 60

तदा रुद्रैर्जगन्नाथस् तया चान्तर्दधे विभुः इन्द्र उवाच तस्माच्छिलाद लोकेषु दुर्लभो वै त्वयोनिजः

tadā rudrairjagannāthas tayā cāntardadhe vibhuḥ indra uvāca tasmācchilāda lokeṣu durlabho vai tvayonijaḥ

അപ്പോൾ രുദ്രന്മാരോടുകൂടെ ജഗന്നാഥൻ, സർവ്വവ്യാപിയായ പ്രഭു, ആ ദേവിയോടും ചേർന്ന് ദൃഷ്ടിയിൽ നിന്ന് അന്തർധാനം ചെയ്തു. ഇന്ദ്രൻ പറഞ്ഞു—“അതുകൊണ്ട്, ഹേ ശിലാദ, ലോകങ്ങളിൽ ‘അയോനിജൻ’ (ഗർഭജന്മമില്ലാത്തവൻ) തീർച്ചയായും ദുർലഭൻ.”

tadāthen
tadā:
rudraiḥby/with the Rudras
rudraiḥ:
jagannāthaḥLord of the universe
jagannāthaḥ:
tayāwith Her (Śakti/Devī)
tayā:
caand
ca:
antardadhedisappeared, became unmanifest
antardadhe:
vibhuḥthe all-pervading, sovereign Lord
vibhuḥ:
indraḥ uvācaIndra said
indraḥ uvāca:
tasmāttherefore/from that reason
tasmāt:
chilādaO Śilāda
chilāda:
lokeṣuin the worlds
lokeṣu:
durlabhaḥdifficult to obtain/rare
durlabhaḥ:
vaiindeed
vai:
tvayonijaḥnot womb-born, self-manifest/ayonija.
tvayonijaḥ:

Indra (within Suta’s narration)

S
Shiva (Jagannatha/Vibhu)
R
Rudras
S
Shakti (Devī)
I
Indra
S
Shilada

FAQs

It supports the theology behind svayambhū/ayonija manifestations: the Pati (Śiva) can withdraw and reveal Himself beyond ordinary birth, which underlies the sanctity of self-manifest Lingas and their exceptional status in worship.

Śiva is shown as Vibhu and Jagannātha—transcendent and all-pervading—capable of antardhāna (becoming unmanifest). This indicates Pati’s freedom from pāśa (bondage) and from the constraints of embodied origination.

No specific rite is prescribed in this line, but it implicitly elevates contemplation on antardhāna and the ayonija principle—key to Pāśupata-oriented devotion where the pashu seeks the Pati who is beyond birth, form, and limitation.