द्विजेश्वरावतारः
The Manifestation of Shiva as Dvijeśvara
तमीश्वरं पञ्चमुखं त्रिनेत्रं पिनाकिनं चन्द्रकलावतंसम् । प्रलम्बपिंगासुजटाकलापं मध्याह्नसद्भास्करकोटितेजसम्
tamīśvaraṃ pañcamukhaṃ trinetraṃ pinākinaṃ candrakalāvataṃsam | pralambapiṃgāsujaṭākalāpaṃ madhyāhnasadbhāskarakoṭitejasam
நான் அந்த பரமேஸ்வரனை கண்டேன்—ஐந்து முகமும் மூன்று கண்களும் உடையவன், பினாகத்தைத் தாங்கியவன், பிறைச்சந்திரத்தால் அலங்கரிக்கப்பட்டவன்; நீண்ட செம்மஞ்சள் ஜடைகளுடன், மதிய நேரக் கோடி சூரிய ஒளிபோல் பிரகாசிப்பவன்।
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Type: stotra
The verse presents Saguna Shiva as Īśvara—recognizable through sacred marks (five faces, three eyes, crescent moon, matted locks) and overwhelming tejas—so the devotee’s mind can rest on a concrete divine form and be lifted toward liberation.
Shiva Purana commonly teaches that the formless (Nirguna) is approached through form (Saguna): meditating on Shiva’s iconic attributes culminates in steadiness of devotion, which is also expressed in Linga worship as the all-pervading presence of Pati (the Lord).
A practical takeaway is dhyāna (visual meditation) on Panchamukha Shiva while repeating the Panchākṣarī mantra “Om Namaḥ Śivāya,” contemplating His three-eyed awareness and sun-like radiance as purifying inner darkness.