Adhyaya 72 — Puradāha: Rudra’s Cosmic Chariot, Pāśupata-Vrata, and Brahmā’s Shiva-Stuti
अरेषु तेषु विप्रेन्द्राश् चादित्या द्वादशैव तु शशिनः षोडशारेषु कला वामस्य सुव्रताः
areṣu teṣu viprendrāś cādityā dvādaśaiva tu śaśinaḥ ṣoḍaśāreṣu kalā vāmasya suvratāḥ
हे विप्रश्रेष्ठांनो! त्या आरांवर बारा आदित्य स्थित आहेत; आणि चंद्राच्या सोळा आरांवर वाम बाजूस शुभ क्रमाने सोळा कला प्रतिष्ठित आहेत।
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It encodes how the cosmos is ritually mapped onto Shiva’s emblem: the solar Ādityas and lunar kalās are assigned to specific spokes, turning Linga-pūjā into a worship of the whole cosmic order as resting in Pati (Śiva).
By placing sun and moon principles within the sacred diagram, the verse implies Śiva-tattva as the transcendental ground that contains and governs time (solar months) and change (lunar phases), while remaining the inner Lord of all devatās.
The left-side (vāma) placement points to lunar/ida symbolism used in Shaiva sādhanā—harmonizing lunar kalās with worship and inner discipline, supporting Pāśupata-style purification of the paśu from pāśa through ordered observance.