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Shloka 27

अध्याय १०१: हैमवती-तपः, तारकवंश-उत्पातः, स्कन्द-प्रत्याशा, मदनदहनम्

विभोर्यतध्वमाक्रष्टुं रुद्रस्यास्य मनो महत् तयोर्योगेन सम्भूतः स्कन्दः शक्तिधरः प्रभुः

vibhoryatadhvamākraṣṭuṃ rudrasyāsya mano mahat tayoryogena sambhūtaḥ skandaḥ śaktidharaḥ prabhuḥ

เพื่อดึงพลังอันแผ่ซ่านของมหาวิภู ความดำริอันยิ่งใหญ่ของรุทระได้บังเกิด จากโยคะแห่งรุทระและศักติ จึงปรากฏพระสกันทะ ผู้เป็นเจ้าและผู้ทรงศักติ।

vibhoḥof the all-pervading Lord
vibhoḥ:
yatthat
yat:
adhvamcourse/force (power in motion)
adhvam:
ākraṣṭumto draw forth/attract
ākraṣṭum:
rudrasyaof Rudra
rudrasya:
asyaof this (Rudra)
asya:
manaḥmind/intention
manaḥ:
mahatgreat/exalted
mahat:
tayoḥof those two
tayoḥ:
yogenaby yoga/union
yogena:
sambhūtaḥarisen/manifested
sambhūtaḥ:
skandaḥSkanda (Kārttikeya)
skandaḥ:
śaktidharaḥbearer of Śakti/spear-bearer
śaktidharaḥ:
prabhuḥsovereign Lord
prabhuḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

R
Rudra (Shiva)
S
Shakti
S
Skanda (Kartikeya)

FAQs

It frames creation and divine manifestation as arising from Pati (Rudra) acting through Śakti; Linga worship similarly honors Shiva as the transcendent source whose power becomes immanent and effective in the world.

Shiva is shown as Vibhu and Pati—sovereign and all-pervading—whose conscious intention (mahat manaḥ) initiates manifestation, while Śakti is the operative power through which that intention becomes a realized form.

The key idea is yoga as union of Shiva and Śakti—an inner Pāśupata-oriented contemplation where the sādhaka meditates on Pati as the source of śakti, loosening pāśa (bondage) for the pashu (individual soul).