Praṇava-Māhātmya and the Twofold Mantra (Sūkṣma–Sthūla) in Śaiva Sādhanā
पंचाक्षरजपेनैव सर्वसिद्धिं लभेन्नरः । प्रणवेनादिसंयुक्तं सदा पंचाक्षरं जपेत्
paṃcākṣarajapenaiva sarvasiddhiṃ labhennaraḥ | praṇavenādisaṃyuktaṃ sadā paṃcākṣaraṃ japet
పంచాక్షర మంత్రజపమాత్రముతోనే మనిషి సమస్త సిద్ధులను పొందును. కావున ఆదిలో ప్రణవం ‘ఓం’ యుక్తమైన పంచాక్షరాన్ని సదా జపించాలి.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Significance: Promises sarva-siddhi through pañcākṣara-japa, a standard pan-Śaiva claim motivating sustained practice at home or in kṣetras.
Mantra: oṃ namaḥ śivāya
Type: panchakshara
Role: liberating
It declares the Panchakshara (Namaḥ Śivāya) as a complete Shaiva sadhana: through steady japa, the devotee gains siddhi culminating in Shiva’s grace and liberation.
The mantra is the sonic form of Shiva used in Saguna worship (including Linga-puja); by prefixing Oṁ, the devotee aligns the practice with the supreme principle (Pati) while remaining anchored in devotional approach.
Daily mantra-japa of “Oṁ Namaḥ Śivāya” (Panchakshara with Pranava), performed consistently as a disciplined practice, ideally alongside Shaiva observances such as purity, devotion, and focused meditation.