Viśvānara-Gṛhapati Upākhyāna — Śivasya Agni-gṛhe Avatāraḥ
The Account of Viśvānara Gṛhapati and Śiva’s Descent into the House of Fire
नन्दीश्वर उवाच । इति तस्या वचः श्रुत्वा ब्राह्मणस्स शुचिव्रतः । क्षणं समाधिमाधाय हृद्येतत्समचिन्तयत्
nandīśvara uvāca | iti tasyā vacaḥ śrutvā brāhmaṇassa śucivrataḥ | kṣaṇaṃ samādhimādhāya hṛdyetatsamacintayat
Nandīśvara berkata: Setelah mendengar kata-katanya, brāhmaṇa itu—teguh dalam nazar yang suci—memasuki samādhi seketika, lalu di dalam hatinya merenung mendalam tentang hal ini.
Nandīśvara (Nandi)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
Significance: Highlights the Śaiva ideal of inner stillness (samādhi) as a means to discern Śiva’s will behind events.
Role: teaching
It highlights a Shaiva discipline: after receiving instruction, the seeker does not react outwardly but turns inward—entering brief samādhi and contemplating in the heart—so understanding becomes steady, pure, and aligned to Shiva-dharma.
Linga-worship in the Shiva Purana is not only external offering but also inner absorption. The brāhmaṇa’s momentary samādhi reflects internal pūjā—centering awareness in the heart where Shiva is realized, while Saguna worship supports this inward steadiness.
A practical takeaway is short, focused dhyāna leading into samādhi-like stillness after hearing sacred teaching—supported by śuci-vrata (purity of conduct). This can be paired with japa of the Panchākṣarī (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) as inner contemplation.