Sunartaka-Naṭa Avatāra and Pārvatī’s Boon-Request (Śiva as the Testing Benefactor)
इति प्रोक्तस्तु ते तात सुनर्तकनटाह्वयः । शिवावतारो हि मया शिवावाक्यप्रपूरकः
iti proktastu te tāta sunartakanaṭāhvayaḥ | śivāvatāro hi mayā śivāvākyaprapūrakaḥ
Assim te declarei, ó filho querido, acerca daquele chamado Sunartaka, também conhecido como Naṭa. Ele é, de fato, uma encarnação de Śiva, manifestada por mim para cumprir a própria palavra e intenção do Senhor Śiva.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Naṭarāja
Significance: Highlights avatāra as ‘śivāvākya-prapūraka’—Śiva’s will operating through a manifested agent; for devotees, recognizing Śiva’s hidden governance (tirodhāna) matures into reliance on anugraha.
The verse emphasizes that Śiva’s incarnations arise for a precise divine purpose—fulfilling Śiva’s own word—showing the sovereignty of Pati (Śiva) whose will guides cosmic order and liberation.
By identifying a specific avatāra as the executor of Śiva’s intention, the verse supports Saguna Śiva devotion: devotees can revere Śiva’s purposeful manifestations while understanding they serve the one Supreme Śiva symbolized by the Liṅga.
A practical takeaway is sankalpa-based japa of the Pañcākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) with contemplation that one’s actions align with Śiva-vākya (Śiva’s will), reinforcing disciplined bhakti rather than mere storytelling.