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Shloka 18

सूर्यरथनिर्णयः (चन्द्रस्य पक्षवृद्धिक्षयविधानम्)

वृद्धिक्षयौ वै पक्षादौ षोडश्यां शशिनः स्मृतौ एवं सूर्यनिमित्तैषा पक्षवृद्धिर्निशाकरे

vṛddhikṣayau vai pakṣādau ṣoḍaśyāṃ śaśinaḥ smṛtau evaṃ sūryanimittaiṣā pakṣavṛddhirniśākare

ความเพิ่มและความพร่องของดวงจันทร์กล่าวว่ามีที่ต้นปักษ์และในตถีที่สิบหก; ดังนี้โดยมีดวงอาทิตย์เป็นเหตุปัจจัยกำหนด ความเจริญแห่งปักษ์จึงตั้งมั่นในผู้ก่อราตรีคือจันทร์

vṛddhi-kṣayauincrease and decrease (waxing and waning)
vṛddhi-kṣayau:
vaiindeed
vai:
pakṣa-ādauat the beginning of the fortnight
pakṣa-ādau:
ṣoḍaśyāmon the sixteenth (tithi/phase)
ṣoḍaśyām:
śaśinaḥof the Moon
śaśinaḥ:
smṛtauare remembered/declared in tradition
smṛtau:
evamthus
evam:
sūrya-nimittāhaving the Sun as the causal factor/occasioning principle
sūrya-nimittā:
eṣāthis
eṣā:
pakṣa-vṛddhiḥthe fortnight’s increase (waxing progression)
pakṣa-vṛddhiḥ:
niśākarein the night-maker, i.e., the Moon
niśākare:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Surya
C
Chandra

FAQs

It grounds Shiva-puja timing in kala (sacred time): understanding waxing/waning tithis helps choose auspicious vrata and abhisheka days, aligning worship with the cosmic order governed through Sun–Moon measures.

By implying that cosmic regulation (kala-niyati) operates through luminaries, it points to Pati (Shiva) as the transcendent Lord of time, while Sun and Moon function as instruments within His ordered manifestation.

Muhurta- and tithi-based observance—planning vrata, japa, and Linga-abhisheka in harmony with paksha progression; for Pashupata-oriented sadhana, this supports disciplined practice through regulated time.