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Shloka 11

मुनिमोहशमनम्

Pāśupata-yoga, Siddhis, Puruṣa-darśana, Saṃsāra, and Prāṇa-Rudra Pañcāhutī

सावद्यं निरवद्यं च सूक्ष्मं चैव प्रवर्तते सावद्यं नाम यत्तत्र पञ्चभूतात्मकं स्मृतम्

sāvadyaṃ niravadyaṃ ca sūkṣmaṃ caiva pravartate sāvadyaṃ nāma yattatra pañcabhūtātmakaṃ smṛtam

В опыте действует и «отмеченное пороком», и «безупречное», а также тонкий принцип. Здесь то, что называется «отмеченным пороком», понимается как составленное из пяти великих элементов (pañca-bhūta).

सावद्यंfault-marked/defect-laden (conditioned)
सावद्यं:
निरवद्यंfaultless/blemishless (unconditioned)
निरवद्यं:
and
:
सूक्ष्मंsubtle (principle)
सूक्ष्मं:
चैवand indeed
चैव:
प्रवर्ततेproceeds/operates/manifests
प्रवर्तते:
सावद्यं नामcalled ‘sāvadya’
सावद्यं नाम:
यत्that which
यत्:
तत्रhere/in this context
तत्र:
पञ्चभूतात्मकंhaving the nature of the five elements (earth, water, fire, air, space)
पञ्चभूतात्मकं:
स्मृतम्is remembered/considered (by tradition).
स्मृतम्:

Suta Goswami (narrating the teaching within the Linga Purana discourse)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames the worshipper’s body and ritual field as sāvadya—made of the five elements—implying that Linga-puja aims to transcend elemental limitation and orient the Pashu toward the niravadya reality of Pati (Shiva).

By contrast: the pañca-bhūta composite is sāvadya (conditioned), while Shiva-tattva is implied as niravadya—untainted, beyond elemental composition, the faultless Pati who is not bound by Pasha.

Tattva-viveka (discriminative discernment) foundational to Pashupata Yoga—recognizing the elemental body as bondage (Pasha) and directing practice toward the subtle and faultless principle realized through Shiva-upasana.