मन्त्रसिद्धिः, प्रतिबन्धनिरासः, श्रद्धा-नियमाः
Mantra Efficacy, Removal of Obstacles, and the Role of Faith/Discipline
तत्र संसाधयेत्पूर्वं मन्त्रं मन्त्रार्थवित्तमः । दृष्टसिद्धिकरं कर्म नान्यथा फलदं यतः
tatra saṃsādhayetpūrvaṃ mantraṃ mantrārthavittamaḥ | dṛṣṭasiddhikaraṃ karma nānyathā phaladaṃ yataḥ
Di sana, orang yang mengetahui makna sejati mantra hendaklah terlebih dahulu menyempurnakan mantra itu dengan benar. Kerana hanya melalui hal itu tindakan ritual menjadi pemberi kejayaan yang nyata; jika tidak, ia tidak menghasilkan buahnya.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva’s ritual-philosophical teaching as preserved in the Vayu Samhita)
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
Sthala Purana: Not a shrine narrative; a doctrinal-ritual principle: mantra must be ‘accomplished’ (saṃsādhita) by one who knows its meaning; only then does karma yield dṛṣṭa-siddhi.
Significance: Shifts focus from mere performance to right understanding (mantrārtha-jñāna) and disciplined mantra-sādhana—key to transforming bondage into efficacy.
Role: teaching
It teaches that mantra is not mere sound: when joined with its meaning (mantra-artha) and properly perfected through sadhana, it becomes spiritually potent; only then do practices bear fruit, aligning the seeker (paśu) toward Shiva (Pati) beyond bondage (pāśa).
Linga worship becomes efficacious when preceded by mantra-sadhana—typically Shaiva mantras such as the Panchakshara—performed with understanding and devotion; without that inner preparation, external offerings remain mechanically done and are said to be less fruit-bearing.
Prioritize mantra-japa with comprehension of the mantra’s meaning, then proceed to worship; in Shaiva practice this commonly supports disciplined japa, dhyana on Shiva, and then puja (often with bhasma/tripundra and rudraksha where prescribed).