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Shloka 3

Shivamurti–Pratishtha Phala: Shivalaya-Nirmana, Kshetra-Mahatmya, Tirtha-Snana, and Mandala-Vidhi

सूत उवाच यस्य भक्तो ऽपि लोके ऽस्मिन् पुत्रदारगृहादिभिः बाध्यते ज्ञानयुक्तश्चेन् न च तस्य गृहैस्तु किम्

sūta uvāca yasya bhakto 'pi loke 'smin putradāragṛhādibhiḥ bādhyate jñānayuktaścen na ca tasya gṛhaistu kim

സൂതൻ പറഞ്ഞു—ഈ ലോകത്തിൽ ഭക്തനായിട്ടും പുത്രൻ, ഭാര്യ, ഗൃഹം മുതലായ ബന്ധനങ്ങളാൽ തടസ്സപ്പെടുകയും, (എന്നിട്ടും) താൻ ജ്ഞാനയുക്തനെന്ന് കരുതുകയും ചെയ്യുന്നവന് ആ ‘ഗൃഹങ്ങൾ’ എന്ത് പ്രയോജനം?

sūta uvācaSūta said
sūta uvāca:
yasyaof whom/for whom
yasya:
bhaktaḥ apieven a devotee
bhaktaḥ api:
loke asminin this world
loke asmin:
putrason
putra:
dārawife
dāra:
gṛha-ādibhiḥby house and other possessions/attachments
gṛha-ādibhiḥ:
bādhyateis obstructed/pressed down/bound
bādhyate:
jñāna-yuktaḥendowed with (spiritual) knowledge
jñāna-yuktaḥ:
cetif/though
cet:
na caand not/then not
na ca:
tasyafor him
tasya:
gṛhaiḥby/with houses (household life)
gṛhaiḥ:
tuindeed/but
tu:
kimwhat (value/use)?
kim:

Suta

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames Linga-bhakti as liberation-oriented: worship of Shiva (Pati) should cut the Pasha of attachment; otherwise, devotion remains mixed with bondage and cannot mature into moksha.

By implication, Shiva is Pati—the liberating Lord—whose grace and knowledge are meant to free the Pashu (individual soul) from Pasha (binding ties) such as possessiveness toward family and property.

The takeaway aligns with Pashupata Yoga: cultivate jñāna and vairāgya alongside devotion—reducing identification with “mine-ness” (mamatā) in household life while anchoring the mind in Shiva.