गजाननपूजा तथा औपासन-होमविधिः
Worship of Gajānana and the Procedure of Aupāsana-Homa
ब्रह्माणं सचतुर्थ्यन्तं स्वाहांतान्प्रणवा दिकान् । संजप्य वाचयित्वाऽथ पुण्याहं च ततः परम्
brahmāṇaṃ sacaturthyantaṃ svāhāṃtānpraṇavā dikān | saṃjapya vācayitvā'tha puṇyāhaṃ ca tataḥ param
Selepas mengulang mantera Brahma yang berakhir dengan kes keempat (datif), bersama dengan suku kata yang bermula dengan Pranava (Om) dan diakhiri dengan "svaha", dia harus menyebabkan ia dibacakan juga; selepas itu, dia harus melakukan pengisytiharan "punyaha" yang mulia.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva-Purana ritual procedure to the sages, within the Kailasa Samhita’s discourse)
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Īśāna
Sthala Purana: Ritual grammar: mantras framed by praṇava (Oṃ) and svāhā, plus the puṇyāha proclamation. No Jyotirliṅga narrative is present.
Significance: Puṇyāha functions as śuddhi (purificatory) and saṅkalpa-confirmation; in Siddhānta terms it helps loosen pāśa (impurity/obstruction) so kriyā can become fit for anugraha.
Mantra: oṃ … svāhā (framing indicated); vyāhṛti/gāyatrī complex implied by ‘praṇavādikān’ and homa context; puṇyāha-vācana follows.
Type: gayatri
It teaches that Shiva-worship begins with śuddhi (purification) and śubha-saṅkalpa (auspicious intent): mantra-japa, proper recitation, and the puṇyāha rite establish inner and outer fitness so devotion becomes a clear channel toward Śiva (Pati) in the Shaiva Siddhanta sense.
Before approaching the Śiva-liṅga as Saguna Śiva in formal pūjā, the practitioner sanctifies the space and mind through Praṇava-based mantras and puṇyāha—preliminaries that guard the worship from impurity and make the offering ‘fit’ (yogya) for the Lord.
Perform japa of Praṇava-linked mantras ending with ‘svāhā,’ have them properly recited by an officiant if needed, and then conduct the puṇyāha (auspicious purification) before commencing Shiva pūjā.