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Shloka 4

Adhyaya 33: Pashupata Conduct, Bhasma-Vrata, and Shiva’s Boon to the Sages

पुंल्लिङ्गं पुरुषो विप्रा मम देहसमुद्भवः उभाभ्यामेव वै सृष्टिर् मम विप्रा न संशयः

puṃlliṅgaṃ puruṣo viprā mama dehasamudbhavaḥ ubhābhyāmeva vai sṛṣṭir mama viprā na saṃśayaḥ

ดูก่อนพราหมณ์ทั้งหลาย ‘ปุงลิงคะ’ คือหลักฝ่ายบุรุษ (ปุรุษะ) บังเกิดจากกายของเราเอง และด้วยทั้งสอง—ปุรุษะและปรกฤติ—สรรพการสร้างสรรค์ของเราจึงดำเนินไป ข้อนี้หาได้มีความสงสัยไม่

puṁlliṅgamthe masculine mark/principle (male gender)
puṁlliṅgam:
puruṣaḥthe male person/principle
puruṣaḥ:
viprāḥO Brahmins/sages
viprāḥ:
mamaof Me/My
mama:
deha-samudbhavaḥarisen from the body
deha-samudbhavaḥ:
ubhābhyāmfrom both (male and female)
ubhābhyām:
evaindeed/alone
eva:
vaisurely
vai:
sṛṣṭiḥcreation/emission
sṛṣṭiḥ:
mamafrom Me/belongs to Me
mama:
nanot
na:
saṁśayaḥdoubt
saṁśayaḥ:

Brahma (within Suta’s narration to the sages of Naimisharanya)

B
Brahma

FAQs

It grounds Linga symbolism in cosmogony: the Lord is the source of gendered manifestation, and worship of the Linga honors the transcendent Pati from whom all differentiated creation proceeds.

Shiva-tattva is implied as the ultimate source (Pati) from whom embodied principles arise; even the differentiated puruṣa is an emanation, while the Lord remains the sovereign cause behind sṛṣṭi.

The takeaway is contemplative: in Pashupata-oriented practice, one meditates on Pati as the origin of all tattvas, loosening pasha (bondage) by recognizing the pashu’s dependence on the Lord rather than on bodily differentiation.