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Shloka 169

वासिष्ठकथनम् (आदित्य–सोमवंशवर्णनम् तथा रुद्रसहस्रनाम-प्रशंसा)

यथाप्रधानं भगवान् इति भक्त्या स्तुतो मया भक्तिमेवं पुरस्कृत्य मया यज्ञपतिर्विभुः

yathāpradhānaṃ bhagavān iti bhaktyā stuto mayā bhaktimevaṃ puraskṛtya mayā yajñapatirvibhuḥ

പ്രധാനമായതിനെ അനുസരിച്ച് ഞാൻ ഭക്തിയോടെ അവനെ ‘ഭഗവാൻ’ എന്നു വിളിച്ച് സ്തുതിച്ചു. ഇങ്ങനെ ഭക്തിയെ മുൻനിർത്തി ഞാൻ സർവ്വവ്യാപിയായ യജ്ഞപതി—ശിവനെ സ്തവിച്ചു.

yathā-pradhānamaccording to what is primary/foremost
yathā-pradhānam:
bhagavānthe Blessed Lord (Pati, possessor of lordly powers)
bhagavān:
itithus/as
iti:
bhaktyāwith devotion
bhaktyā:
stutaḥpraised
stutaḥ:
mayāby me
mayā:
bhaktimdevotion (loving surrender)
bhaktim:
evamin this manner
evam:
puraskṛtyaplacing in front, giving precedence to
puraskṛtya:
yajña-patiḥLord of sacrifice, master of yajña (Shiva as the inner enjoyer and regulator)
yajña-patiḥ:
vibhuḥthe all-pervading, sovereign Lord
vibhuḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating the puranic account; the 'I' refers to the internal narrator/devotee within the cited episode)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It establishes that bhakti is to be placed foremost (puraskṛtya) when praising Shiva; Linga-worship is not mere ritual formality but devotion-centered approach to the Pati (Shiva) who sanctifies all offerings.

Shiva is presented as Bhagavān and Vibhu—sovereign and all-pervading—and as Yajñapati, the inner lord who receives and regulates sacrifice, indicating transcendence while immanently pervading all sacred action.

The takeaway is that yajña and stuti become efficacious when performed with bhakti; in Pashupata-oriented practice, devotion is the inner discipline that loosens Pāśa (bondage) for the Pashu (soul) under the grace of Pati (Shiva).