Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 6

देवदारुवनौकसां प्रति ब्रह्मोपदेशः—लिङ्गलक्षण-प्रतिष्ठा-विधिः, शिवमायारूपदर्शनं, स्तुतिः

एष चक्री च वज्री च श्रीवत्सकृतलक्षणः योगी कृतयुगे चैव त्रेतायां क्रतुर् उच्यते

eṣa cakrī ca vajrī ca śrīvatsakṛtalakṣaṇaḥ yogī kṛtayuge caiva tretāyāṃ kratur ucyate

एष चक्री च वज्री च श्रीवत्सकृतलक्षणः। योगी कृतयुगे चैव त्रेतायां क्रतुरुच्यते॥

eṣaḥthis (Lord)
eṣaḥ:
cakrībearer of the discus
cakrī:
caand
ca:
vajrībearer of the thunderbolt
vajrī:
caand
ca:
śrīvatsa-kṛta-lakṣaṇaḥhaving the mark/sign of Śrīvatsa
śrīvatsa-kṛta-lakṣaṇaḥ:
yogīyogin, master of yoga
yogī:
kṛta-yugein the Kṛta Yuga
kṛta-yuge:
caivaindeed/also
caiva:
tretāyāmin the Tretā Yuga
tretāyām:
kratuḥsacrifice/ritual power (Kratu)
kratuḥ:
ucyateis called/said
ucyate:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames Shiva as the timeless Pati whose grace reaches paśus in every age—through inner discipline (yoga) and outer observance (kratu/yajña). Linga worship unifies both: inward realization and outward offering.

Shiva-tattva is shown as one reality with many upādhis (modes): the Yogin who dissolves pasha through samyag-darśana and restraint, and the Kratu who sanctifies action so karma becomes a means toward release rather than bondage.

Two complementary paths are implied: Kṛta Yuga emphasizes yogic mastery (Pāśupata-oriented inner practice), while Tretā emphasizes kratu—Vedic yajña performed as an offering to Mahādeva, transforming ritual into devotion and purification.