कार्त्तिकेयान्वेषण-नन्दिसंवाद-वर्णनम्
Search for Kārttikeya and the Nandī Dialogue
तत्र बालोऽभवस्त्वं हि देवकार्यकृति प्रभुः । तत्र लब्धः कृत्तिकाभिस्त्वं भूमिं गच्छ सांप्रतम्
tatra bālo'bhavastvaṃ hi devakāryakṛti prabhuḥ | tatra labdhaḥ kṛttikābhistvaṃ bhūmiṃ gaccha sāṃpratam
അവിടെയേ, ഓ പ്രഭോ, ദേവകാര്യസിദ്ധിക്കായി നീ ബാലനായി. അവിടെയേ കൃത്തികകൾ നിന്നെ സ്വീകരിച്ച് പോഷിച്ചു; ഇപ്പോൾ ഉടൻ ഭൂമിയിലേക്കു പോകുക.
Sūta Gosvāmi (narrating the Kumārakhaṇḍa account to the sages of Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Sthala Purana: Kumāra’s appearance in the Śara-forest and nurturing by the Kṛttikās is presented as divine arrangement for deva-kārya (slaying Tāraka).
Significance: Affirms that divine births occur for loka-saṅgraha; inspires confidence that Śiva’s grace manifests as timely aid through appointed guardians (Kṛttikās).
Role: nurturing
Cosmic Event: Astra-bearing divine child manifests at the destined locus to restore deva-order (dharma-balance).
It presents divine embodiment as purposeful: the Lord appears in a form suited to restore cosmic order, showing that dharma-oriented action, when aligned with Shiva’s will, becomes a means toward inner purification and grace.
Kumāra’s mission unfolds under Shiva’s saguna governance—Shiva’s compassionate, manifest power guiding the devas. Devotion to the Linga includes honoring Shiva’s divine retinue and their roles in protecting dharma.
A practical takeaway is sankalpa-driven worship: offer prayers to Shiva with the Pañcākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) and dedicate one’s actions to dharma, seeking Shiva’s guidance to act rightly ‘now’ (sāṃpratam).