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Shloka 29

मुनिमोहशमनम्

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

गुणोत्तरमथैश्वर्ये सर्वतः सूक्ष्ममुच्यते ऐश्वर्यं चाप्रतीघातं प्राप्य योगमनुत्तमम्

guṇottaramathaiśvarye sarvataḥ sūkṣmamucyate aiśvaryaṃ cāpratīghātaṃ prāpya yogamanuttamam

गुणोत्तरमथैश्वर्ये सर्वतः सूक्ष्ममुच्यते। ऐश्वर्यं चाप्रतीघातं प्राप्य योगमनुत्तमम्॥

guṇottarambeyond the guṇas
guṇottaram:
athathen/thereupon
atha:
aiśvaryein lordship/divine power
aiśvarye:
sarvataḥin every respect
sarvataḥ:
sūkṣmamsubtle, minute, inwardly refined
sūkṣmam:
ucyateis said/declared
ucyate:
aiśvaryamsovereignty, spiritual dominion
aiśvaryam:
caand
ca:
apratīghātamunobstructed, irresistible (not checked by anything)
apratīghātam:
prāpyahaving attained
prāpya:
yogamYoga, spiritual union/discipline
yogam:
anuttamamunsurpassed, supreme
anuttamam:

Suta Goswami (narrating the teaching within the Linga Purana’s discourse on Yoga and aiśvarya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames Linga-upāsanā as a path that refines the seeker into inner subtlety (sūkṣmatā) and culminates in supreme Yoga—devotional and contemplative union with Śiva as Pati, not merely external ritual merit.

By implying a guṇātīta (beyond the guṇas) attainment and unobstructed aiśvarya, it points to Śiva-tattva as the sovereign reality that is not limited by prakṛti’s guṇas or by any opposing force—Pati who overcomes pāśa.

It highlights Pāśupata-oriented Yoga: moving beyond guṇa-identification through disciplined meditation and Śiva-centered upāsanā, leading to unobstructed spiritual mastery (apratīghāta-aiśvarya) and the highest yogic union.