स्नानविधिः — गायत्र्यावाहन, सूर्यवन्दन, तर्पण, पञ्चमहायज्ञ, भस्मस्नान, मन्त्रस्नान
नास्ति सत्यसमं यस्माद् असत्यं पातकं च यत् ईशानेन शिरोदेशं मुखं तत्पुरुषेण च
nāsti satyasamaṃ yasmād asatyaṃ pātakaṃ ca yat īśānena śirodeśaṃ mukhaṃ tatpuruṣeṇa ca
ไม่มีสิ่งใดเสมอด้วยสัจจะ; ความเท็จเป็นบาปหนักแท้จริง อีศานะทรงประทับเหนือส่วนศีรษะ และตัตปุรุษะทรงประทับเหนือส่วนใบหน้า—ดังนี้พระปติ พระศิวะ ทรงอภิบาลอวัยวะแห่งผู้มีร่างกายด้วยภาวะจักรวาลของพระองค์
Suta Goswami (narrating Śaiva doctrine within the Purāṇic discourse to the sages of Naimiṣāraṇya)
It links Linga-centered Śaiva practice to Satya (truth) as a primary purifier: worship is not merely external ritual, but aligning one’s speech and integrity to remove pasha (bondage) so the pashu (soul) may turn toward Pati (Śiva).
Śiva-tattva is shown as both ethical and cosmic: the Lord manifests as Īśāna and Tatpuruṣa, governing head and face—implying consciousness, identity, and speech are pervaded and ordered by Śiva’s aspects.
Truthfulness (satya) is emphasized as a core niyama-like discipline within Śaiva sādhanā; it supports mantra-japa and pūjā by purifying vāṅ-maya (speech) and stabilizing the sādhaka’s inner alignment for Pāśupata-oriented liberation.