Adhyaya 72 — Puradāha: Rudra’s Cosmic Chariot, Pāśupata-Vrata, and Brahmā’s Shiva-Stuti
पिप्पलायतनश्चैव तथा ह्यङ्गारकाशनः शिथिलः शिथिलास्यश् च अक्षपादो ह्यजः कुजः
pippalāyatanaścaiva tathā hyaṅgārakāśanaḥ śithilaḥ śithilāsyaś ca akṣapādo hyajaḥ kujaḥ
அவர் புனித பிப்பல/அசுவத்த மரத்தைத் தம் ஆலயமாகக் கொண்டவர்; யாகஅக்னியின் எரியங்காரங்களை உண்ணுபவர்; பந்தமற்ற சிதிலன்; அமைதியான சிதிலவாயுடையவன்; அழியாத பாதங்களுடையவன்; அஜன் (பிறவியற்றவன்); மேலும் ‘குஜ’ என்ற பெயராலும் புகழ்பெற்றவன்।
Suta Goswami (reciting the Shiva Sahasranama to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It supplies specific Sahasranama epithets used in Linga-puja and japa, linking Shiva to sacred abodes (pippala) and to agni-offerings—showing that the Linga is worshipped both in temple-space and through Vedic fire-rites.
By calling Him ‘Unborn’ (aja) and ‘unbound/relaxed’ (śithila), the verse points to Shiva as Pati—self-existent, untouched by pasha (bondage), and the imperishable ground of all powers, even those symbolized by fiery force (kuja).
Homa-bhakti is implied through ‘aṅgārakāśana’ (consumer of embers), while ‘śithila’ suggests the yogic release of tension and bondage—an inner Pashupata-oriented detachment offered to Shiva alongside outer worship.