Nara-Narayana’s Tapas, Indra’s Temptation, and the Burning of Kama: The Origin of Ananga and the Shiva-Linga Episode
देवावूचतुः / भक्तः पातितं लिङ्गं यदेतद् भुवि शङ्कर एतत् प्रगृह्यतां भूय अतो देव स्तुवावहे
devāvūcatuḥ / bhaktaḥ pātitaṃ liṅgaṃ yadetad bhuvi śaṅkara etat pragṛhyatāṃ bhūya ato deva stuvāvahe
Para dewa berkata: “Wahai Śaṅkara, liṅga ini yang telah dicampakkan ke bumi—sudilah Engkau mengangkatnya kembali. Oleh itu, wahai Dewa, kami memuji-Mu.”
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Sacred symbols (like the liṅga) are treated as loci of presence and order; restoring them is framed as a dharmic act, approached through reverence rather than force.
This is narrative (ākhyāna) material supporting dharma and worship practices; it aligns more with Vamśānucarita-style storytelling than with sarga/pratisarga.
A ‘fallen liṅga’ can symbolize disrupted worship or cosmic imbalance; the Devas’ request that Śiva ‘take it up again’ encodes restoration of sacred order and validates liṅga-bhakti within a broader, non-sectarian Purāṇic frame.