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Shloka 55

Adhyaya 17: लिङ्गोद्भव—ब्रह्मविष्ण्वहङ्कार-शमनं, ओंकार-प्रादुर्भावः, मन्त्र-तत्त्वं च

सबाह्याभ्यन्तरं चैव सबाह्याभ्यन्तरस्थितम् आदिमध्यान्तरहितम् आनन्दस्यापि कारणम्

sabāhyābhyantaraṃ caiva sabāhyābhyantarasthitam ādimadhyāntarahitam ānandasyāpi kāraṇam

พระปรมัตถ์นั้นเป็นทั้งภายนอกและภายใน และสถิตเป็นอันตัรยามินอยู่ในสิ่งทั้งนอกและใน ทรงปราศจากต้น กลาง และปลาย—เป็นเหตุและฐานแห่งอานันทะด้วย

sa-bāhya-abhyantaramhaving (the nature of) both outer and inner
sa-bāhya-abhyantaram:
ca evaand indeed
ca eva:
sa-bāhya-abhyantara-sthitamabiding/established in both the external and internal
sa-bāhya-abhyantara-sthitam:
ādi-madhya-anta-rahitamdevoid of beginning, middle, and end
ādi-madhya-anta-rahitam:
ānandasyāpieven of bliss (ānanda)
ānandasyāpi:
kāraṇamthe cause, source, ground
kāraṇam:

Suta Goswami (narrating the Linga’s supreme nature within the Purva-Bhaga discourse)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames the Linga as the sign (liṅga) of Pati—Shiva who pervades both the outer cosmos and the inner self—so worship is not mere external ritual but recognition of the same reality within and without.

Shiva-tattva is described as all-pervading (inside and outside), transcending time and limitation (without beginning, middle, or end), and as the causal ground of ānanda—bliss that arises when Pashu’s bondage (pāśa) is loosened by grace and knowledge.

The verse supports a Pashupata-style inner-outer discipline: external Linga-puja aligned with inward contemplation of Shiva as the indweller, cultivating steady awareness of Pati beyond temporal divisions.