अवभृथस्नान-तीर्थयात्रा-तेजोदर्शनम् | Avabhṛtha Bath, Tīrtha-Pilgrimage, and the Vision of Divine Radiance
अथ पाशुपताः सिद्धाः भस्मसञ्छन्नविग्रहाः । मुनयो ऽभ्येत्य शतशो लीनाः स्युस्तत्र तेजसि
atha pāśupatāḥ siddhāḥ bhasmasañchannavigrahāḥ | munayo 'bhyetya śataśo līnāḥ syustatra tejasi
Kemudian para siddha Pāśupata yang sempurna—tubuh mereka diselubungi abu suci—datang beratus-ratus; dan para muni itu, setelah mendekat, pun larut terserap ke dalam tejas Tuhan itu sendiri.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
Sthala Purana: Not a specific jyotirliṅga episode; the focus is on Pāśupata siddhas drawn to Śiva’s tejas and attaining laya (absorption) by grace.
Significance: Models the ideal of Śaiva asceticism: bhasma-dhāraṇa, tapas, and surrender culminating in proximity to Śiva and transformative absorption.
Role: liberating
Cosmic Event: Mystical laya into divine tejas—presented as a grace-event rather than a cosmological dissolution.
It portrays the Shaiva Siddhanta ideal of liberation: perfected Pāśupatas, purified by discipline and marked by bhasma, draw near to Paśupati and become absorbed in His tejas—signifying release from pasha (bondage) and resting in Shiva’s grace-filled consciousness.
The approach of the sages indicates upāsanā of Saguna Shiva (often through Linga-worship and Shaiva observances). Their final absorption into “tejas” points beyond form to Shiva’s subtle presence, showing how Saguna worship culminates in realization of the Lord’s transcendent radiance.
The explicit marker is bhasma—sacred ash worn as a Shaiva vow (Tripuṇḍra), paired with Pāśupata discipline: approaching Shiva with devotion, mantra-japa (especially the Panchākṣarī, “Om Namaḥ Śivāya”), and meditative absorption (laya) into the Lord’s light.