Śiva-Śakti Tattva, Varṇa-Rahasya, and Mahāvākya-Bhāvanā
Interpretive Discipline
व्याख्यातत्वञ्च कर्म्मादिगुर्वासनपरिग्रहम् । अनुगृह्य गुरुस्तस्मै शिष्याय शिवरूपिणे
vyākhyātatvañca karmmādigurvāsanaparigraham | anugṛhya gurustasmai śiṣyāya śivarūpiṇe
ഗുരു കരുണയോടെ അവനോട് തത്ത്വാർത്ഥം വ്യാഖ്യാനിച്ചു, കർമാദി വിധികളോടെ ആരംഭിക്കുന്ന ഗുരുവിന്റെ ആചാരശിക്ഷയും നൽകി; അനുഗ്രഹത്തോടെ ശിവരൂപിയായ ആ ശിഷ്യന് അതെല്ലാം അർപ്പിച്ചു।
Suta Goswami (narrating the Kailasha Samhita discourse to the sages at Naimisharanya)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Role: liberating
It teaches that liberation-oriented knowledge is not merely intellectual: the Guru, moved by grace, transmits both right understanding and the lived discipline of practice, by which the disciple becomes “Śiva-formed” (aligned with Śiva-consciousness).
The verse emphasizes guru-guided sādhana and observance; in Shaiva practice this commonly includes Saguna worship such as Liṅga-pūjā, through which the disciple’s mind is purified and made fit to realize Śiva as the indwelling Pati.
It points to disciplined observances (karma-ādi) received from the Guru—such as regular Shiva worship, mantra-japa (notably the Pañcākṣarī), and vow-based purity—undertaken as a grace-supported path toward Śiva-realization.