Devas Praise Śiva; Gaṇeśa Manifests as Vighneśvara and Receives the Primacy of Worship
तदा तयोर्विनिर्गतः सुभैरवः स मूर्तिमान् स्थितो ननर्त बालकः समस्तमङ्गलालयः
tadā tayorvinirgataḥ subhairavaḥ sa mūrtimān sthito nanarta bālakaḥ samastamaṅgalālayaḥ
Então, daqueles dois surgiu Subhairava, corporificado e manifesto; ali, de pé como uma criança, ele dançou, sendo o próprio abrigo de toda auspiciosidade.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It presents Śiva (as Subhairava) as the living source of maṅgala (auspicious power), implying that Linga-worship is not merely symbolic but a direct approach to Pati—the embodiment of auspiciousness and protection.
Śiva-tattva is shown as simultaneously transcendent and immanent: though the supreme Pati, he freely assumes a mūrti (form) and performs līlā (divine play), revealing that the Lord’s grace can appear in approachable, even childlike, modes.
The verse points to Bhairava-upāsanā as a protective and auspicious focus within Śaiva practice; yogically, it suggests centering awareness on Pati as the maṅgalālaya (abode of auspiciousness), loosening pāśa (bondage) upon the paśu (soul).