उमास्वयंवरः / भवोद्वाहः, गणसमागमः, अविमुक्तक्षेत्रमाहात्म्यम्, तथा विनायक-उत्पत्तिसूचना
स्वात्मानमपि देवाय सोदकं प्रददौ हरिः अथ सर्वे मुनिश्रेष्ठाः सर्ववेदार्थपारगाः
svātmānamapi devāya sodakaṃ pradadau hariḥ atha sarve muniśreṣṭhāḥ sarvavedārthapāragāḥ
Hari (Viṣṇu), oferecendo a água conforme o rito, apresentou até o seu próprio ser ao Deva (Śiva). Então os melhores dos sábios—os que haviam alcançado a outra margem do sentido de todos os Vedas—também anuíram e seguiram esse ato de entrega.
Suta Goswami
It highlights udaka-offering (ritual water) and the highest limb of worship—ātma-nivedana—where the devotee offers the very self to Śiva as Pati, not merely external gifts.
Śiva is presented as the Deva worthy of total surrender: the supreme Pati who receives the pashu’s self-offering and, by that grace-oriented relationship, loosens pasha (bondage) beyond mere ritual merit.
A simple but central Shiva-pūjā element—offering water (udaka)—is paired with the yogic-bhakti principle of self-surrender, a Pāśupata-aligned attitude where the pashu entrusts itself to Pati.