योगप्रकारनिर्णयः
Classification and Definition of Yoga
यम इत्युच्यते सद्भिः पञ्चावयवयोगतः । शौचं तुष्टिस्तपश्चैव जपः प्रणिधिरेव च
yama ityucyate sadbhiḥ pañcāvayavayogataḥ | śaucaṃ tuṣṭistapaścaiva japaḥ praṇidhireva ca
Orang-orang saleh menyatakan bahawa “yama” terdiri daripada lima anggota: kesucian (śauca), rasa puas hati (tuṣṭi), tapa/pertapaan (tapas), japa iaitu pengulangan mantra, dan penyerahan diri yang khusyuk (praṇidhāna) kepada Tuhan.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
Sthala Purana: Not a Jyotirliṅga passage; it defines yama as a fivefold discipline culminating in praṇidhāna (devoted surrender) and includes japa—both central to Śaiva sādhana.
Significance: Frames inner disciplines (śauca, tuṣṭi, tapas, japa, praṇidhāna) as direct means for pāśa-kṣaya and for receiving Śiva’s anugraha (grace).
Type: panchakshara
Role: teaching
It defines yama as a fivefold inner discipline—purity, contentment, austerity, mantra-japa, and surrender—showing that liberation in Shaiva teaching is grounded in ethical refinement and steady God-orientation toward Shiva (Pati).
These five practices support Saguna Shiva worship: śauca prepares the devotee for pūjā, tapas strengthens resolve, japa sustains remembrance of Shiva (often via the Panchakshara), and praṇidhāna culminates in offering the self to the Lord worshipped as the Linga.
The verse explicitly recommends japa and praṇidhāna—regular repetition of a Shiva-mantra (such as “Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) with heartfelt surrender—supported by śauca and tapas as daily disciplines.