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Shloka 68

देवैर्विष्णोः शरणागमनम्—शिवलिङ्गस्थापनं, शिवसहस्रनामस्तवः, सुदर्शनचक्रप्रदानं च

कालयोगी महानादो महोत्साहो महाबलः महाबुद्धिर् महावीर्यो भूतचारी पुरन्दरः

kālayogī mahānādo mahotsāho mahābalaḥ mahābuddhir mahāvīryo bhūtacārī purandaraḥ

അവൻ കാലയോഗി; മഹാനാദം, മഹോത്സാഹം, മഹാബലം. മഹാബുദ്ധിയും മഹാവീര്യവും ഉള്ളവൻ; ഭൂതചാരി, പുരന്ദരൻ—ദുർഗ്ഗസമമായ പാശബന്ധങ്ങൾ തകർക്കുന്ന ശിവൻ।

kāla-yogīthe yogin united with/sovereign over Time
kāla-yogī:
mahā-nādaḥthe great cosmic sound (primordial nāda)
mahā-nādaḥ:
mahā-utsāhaḥof great ardour/initiative
mahā-utsāhaḥ:
mahā-balaḥof great power/strength
mahā-balaḥ:
mahā-buddhiḥof great intellect/discernment
mahā-buddhiḥ:
mahā-vīryaḥof great valour/energy
mahā-vīryaḥ:
bhūta-cārīmoving among beings/spirits, pervading all creatures
bhūta-cārī:
purandaraḥdestroyer of fortresses, breaker of strongholds (of bondage)
purandaraḥ:

Suta Goswami

S
Shiva

FAQs

These names praise Shiva as the inner power of yoga (kālayogī) and the cosmic principle of nāda; in Linga worship, they frame the Linga as the sign of Pati—the Lord who empowers practice and dissolves bondage for the devotee.

Shiva is presented as transcending time while governing it, as the primal vibration (mahānāda), and as the supreme strength, intelligence, and vīrya that can break the ‘fortresses’ of limitation—revealing Him as Pati who liberates the pashu from pāśa.

The verse points to time-transcending yogic absorption and nāda-oriented contemplation; it supports Pāśupata-oriented sādhanā where devotion and yoga are aimed at cutting bonds rather than merely gaining worldly power.