Kṣaura-Snāna-Vidhi — Rite of Tonsure/Shaving and Purificatory Bath (Śaiva Procedure)
तीर्थं प्रविश्य तन्मध्ये निमज्योन्मज्य ताम्मृदम् । स्कन्धे संस्थाप्य पूर्वोक्तप्रकारेण विलेपयेत्
tīrthaṃ praviśya tanmadhye nimajyonmajya tāmmṛdam | skandhe saṃsthāpya pūrvoktaprakāreṇa vilepayet
Masuklah ke tīrtha (tempat mandi suci) dan di tengahnya menyelam lalu timbul semula, ambillah tanah liat suci itu; letakkan pada bahu, kemudian sapukan pada tubuh menurut cara yang telah dihuraikan sebelumnya.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Sthala Purana: General tīrtha-vidhi: entering sacred waters, submerging and emerging, and taking holy earth/clay for purification—treated as a portable sanctifier akin to tīrtha-mṛd/bhasma traditions.
Significance: Tīrtha-snāna and mṛd-grahaṇa function as external purification supporting inner purification; in Siddhānta terms, it aids the paśu in loosening pāśa (mala/karma) through disciplined observance.
The verse teaches tīrtha-śauca (purification through a sacred ford) and the disciplined use of sanctified earth/ash as an outer sign of inner surrender to Pati (Śiva), aligning the practitioner’s body and intention with Shaiva purity and devotion.
Preparing the body by tīrtha-snana and applying sacred earth/ash supports Saguna Śiva worship by making the devotee ritually fit to approach the Linga with reverence, steadiness, and the prescribed Shaiva marks.
It indicates tīrtha-bathing followed by collecting sanctified clay and applying it as a Shaiva mark (commonly associated with bhasma/tripundra procedures), performed exactly according to the earlier stated method.