Shloka 53

नैध्रुवस्य तु सा पत्नी माता वै कुण्डपायिनाम् असितस्यैकपर्णायां ब्रह्मिष्ठः समपद्यत

naidhruvasya tu sā patnī mātā vai kuṇḍapāyinām asitasyaikaparṇāyāṃ brahmiṣṭhaḥ samapadyata

नैध्रुवस्य तु सा पत्नी माता वै कुण्डपायिनाम् । असितस्यैकपर्णायां ब्रह्मिष्ठः समपद्यत ॥

naidhruvasyaof Naidhruva
naidhruvasya:
tuindeed/but
tu:
she
:
patnīwife
patnī:
mātāmother
mātā:
vaicertainly
vai:
kuṇḍapāyināmof the Kuṇḍapāyins (a lineage/group)
kuṇḍapāyinām:
asitasyaof Asita
asitasya:
ekaparṇāyāmin/through Ekaparṇā (wife named Ekaparṇā)
ekaparṇāyām:
brahmiṣṭhaḥone most devoted/established in Brahman, a spiritually eminent person
brahmiṣṭhaḥ:
samapadyatacame to be/was born/manifested
samapadyata:

Suta Goswami

N
Naidhruva
K
Kuṇḍapāyins
A
Asita
E
Ekaparṇā
B
Brahmiṣṭha

FAQs

It situates Linga-centered Shaiva dharma within a living lineage: the Purana links spiritual authority (brahmiṣṭha sages) and dynastic continuity, implying that right worship and right knowledge are preserved through qualified families and seers.

Indirectly, by praising a figure as brahmiṣṭha, it points to the Shaiva Siddhanta ideal where the Pashu (individual soul) becomes oriented toward Brahman/Paramashiva through dharma and right understanding—moving from pasha (bondage) toward pati-prapti (turning to the Lord).

No specific puja-vidhi is stated; the emphasis is on paramparā (lineage) and brahmiṣṭhatā—fitness for higher disciplines such as Pashupata Yoga and Shaiva vrata—implying that advanced practice rests on inherited dharma and realized guidance.