पञ्चकृत्यलक्षणनिर्णयः
Definition of Śiva’s Five Cosmic Acts—Pañcakṛtya
नमः प्रणववाच्याय नमः प्रणवलिंगिने । नमः सृष्ट्यादिकर्त्रे च नमः पंचमुखायते
namaḥ praṇavavācyāya namaḥ praṇavaliṃgine | namaḥ sṛṣṭyādikartre ca namaḥ paṃcamukhāyate
പ്രണവം (ഓം) കൊണ്ട് വാച്യനായ പ്രഭുവിന് നമസ്കാരം; പ്രണവലിംഗസ്വരൂപനു നമസ്കാരം. സൃഷ്ട്യാദികളുടെ കര്ത്താവിന് നമസ്കാരം; ഹേ പഞ്ചമുഖാ, നിനക്കു നമസ്കാരം.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Jyotirlinga: Viśvanātha
Sthala Purana: The hymn’s focus on Praṇava-liṅga and the Lord as sṛṣṭy-ādi-kartṛ aligns with Kāśī Viśvanātha’s identity as the self-revealed Lord of the universe, where liberation is granted by Śiva’s own upadeśa (tāraka) at death; this chapter’s Viśveśvara framing naturally resonates with that sthala-tradition.
Significance: Darśana and worship are held to confer pāpa-kṣaya and mokṣa-prāpti through Śiva’s anugraha; Kāśī is classically praised as a kṣetra where liberation is especially accessible.
Mantra: namaḥ praṇavavācyāya namaḥ praṇavaliṃgine | namaḥ sṛṣṭyādikartre ca namaḥ paṃcamukhāyate
Type: stotra
Offering: pushpa
It praises Shiva as Pati—the supreme Lord indicated by Om—who manifests as the Linga and initiates creation, guiding devotees from outward worship to inner realization.
By calling Shiva “Pranava-Linga,” the verse links Saguna worship (the Linga as an accessible form) with the transcendent sign (Om), showing the Linga as a sacred support for meditation on the Supreme.
Japa and dhyāna on the Pranava (Om) with Linga-pūjā—mentally or ritually offering salutations to Shiva as the Five-faced Lord—aligns the devotee’s mind with his creative and liberating power.