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Shloka 5

प्रसाद-ज्ञान-योग-मोक्षक्रमः तथा व्यास-रुद्रावतार-मन्वन्तर-परम्परा

प्रसादाज्जायते ज्ञानं ज्ञानाद्योगः प्रवर्तते योगेन जायते मुक्तिः प्रसादादखिलं ततः

prasādājjāyate jñānaṃ jñānādyogaḥ pravartate yogena jāyate muktiḥ prasādādakhilaṃ tataḥ

ପ୍ରସାଦରୁ ଜ୍ଞାନ ଜନ୍ମେ, ଜ୍ଞାନରୁ ଯୋଗ ପ୍ରବର୍ତ୍ତେ। ଯୋଗରୁ ମୁକ୍ତି ଜନ୍ମେ; ତେଣୁ ସମସ୍ତ ଶେଷେ ପ୍ରସାଦରୁ ହିଁ।

प्रसादात् (prasādāt)from grace/favor (of Pati, Śiva)
प्रसादात् (prasādāt):
जायते (jāyate)is born/arises
जायते (jāyate):
ज्ञानम् (jñānam)true knowledge, right insight (tattva-jñāna)
ज्ञानम् (jñānam):
ज्ञानात् (jñānāt)from knowledge
ज्ञानात् (jñānāt):
योगः (yogaḥ)yoga, disciplined union (Pāśupata-oriented sādhana)
योगः (yogaḥ):
प्रवर्तते (pravartate)begins, proceeds, is activated
प्रवर्तते (pravartate):
योगेन (yogena)by/through yoga
योगेन (yogena):
मुक्तिः (muktiḥ)liberation (release of the paśu from pāśa)
मुक्तिः (muktiḥ):
अखिलम् (akhilam)all, the entire (spiritual attainment sequence)
अखिलम् (akhilam):
ततः (tataḥ)therefore/thereupon
ततः (tataḥ):

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya, conveying Shaiva doctrine)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames Linga-puja as a grace-centered path: worship invites Śiva’s prasāda, which ripens into tattva-jñāna, matures as disciplined yoga, and culminates in mokṣa—so ritual is not mere form but a conduit of divine favor.

Śiva is implied as Pati—the sovereign source of prasāda—without which the paśu cannot gain liberating knowledge or yogic transformation; liberation is presented as dependent on His initiating grace rather than egoic effort alone.

It highlights a Pāśupata-style progression: devotion and worship leading to prasāda, then jñāna (right understanding), then yoga (steady sādhana), culminating in mokṣa (release from pāśa/bondage).