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Shloka 7

मुनिमोहशमनम्

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

एवं पाशुपतं योगं मोक्षसिद्धिप्रदायकम् तस्याणिमादयो विप्रा नान्यथा कर्मकोटिभिः

evaṃ pāśupataṃ yogaṃ mokṣasiddhipradāyakam tasyāṇimādayo viprā nānyathā karmakoṭibhiḥ

ఈ విధంగా పాశుపతయోగము మోక్షసిద్ధిని ప్రసాదించునది. దానివలన అణిమాది సిద్ధులు కలుగును; ఓ విప్రులారా, కోట్లాది కర్మకాండములచేత కూడా ఈ ఫలము వేరే విధంగా లభించదు.

evamthus
evam:
pāśupatamof Pāśupati (Śiva), the Pāśupata path
pāśupatam:
yogamyoga, disciplined union
yogam:
mokṣa-siddhi-pradāyakamthat which grants the accomplishment of liberation
mokṣa-siddhi-pradāyakam:
tasyaof it (of that yoga)
tasya:
aṇimā-ādayaḥaṇimā and the other siddhis (subtle powers)
aṇimā-ādayaḥ:
viprāḥO brāhmaṇas, O sages
viprāḥ:
na anyathānot otherwise, by no other way
na anyathā:
karma-koṭibhiḥby crores/millions of karmas (rites, works).
karma-koṭibhiḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya, summarizing Shaiva teaching on Pāśupata Yoga)

S
Shiva (Pashupati)

FAQs

It elevates the Shaiva path (Pāśupata Yoga) as the direct means to mokṣa-siddhi, implying that devotion and disciplined union with Pati (Śiva)—often centered on Linga-upāsanā—surpasses mere accumulation of ritual karma.

Śiva is implied as Pāśupati (Pati), the liberating Lord whose yoga-path cuts the pasha (bondage) of the pashu (individual soul), granting not only siddhis but the higher consummation of liberation.

Pāśupata Yoga is highlighted as the decisive sādhanā—superior to karma-koṭi (vast ritual works)—and is said to yield aṇimā and related siddhis, with mokṣa as its principal fruition.