Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 47

Pāśupata-vrata Māhātmya: Dvādaśa-Liṅga Mahāvrata, Month-wise Dravya, and Pūjā-krama

संवत्सरान्ते गोदानं वृषोत्सर्गं विशेषतः भोजयेद्ब्राह्मणान्भक्त्या श्रोत्रियान् वेदपारगान्

saṃvatsarānte godānaṃ vṛṣotsargaṃ viśeṣataḥ bhojayedbrāhmaṇānbhaktyā śrotriyān vedapāragān

เมื่อสิ้นปี พึงถวายทานโค และโดยเฉพาะทำพิธีวฤโษตสรรคะ (ปล่อยโคเพศผู้ตามพิธี) แล้วด้วยภักติพึงถวายภัตตาหารแก่พราหมณ์ผู้เป็นศฺโรตริยะ ผู้เชี่ยวชาญพระเวท

saṃvatsara-anteat the end of the year
saṃvatsara-ante:
go-dānamgifting of cows
go-dānam:
vṛṣa-utsargamreleasing/consecrating a bull (vṛṣotsarga)
vṛṣa-utsargam:
viśeṣataḥespecially, in particular
viśeṣataḥ:
bhojayetshould feed, should cause to eat
bhojayet:
brāhmaṇānBrahmanas
brāhmaṇān:
bhaktyāwith devotion
bhaktyā:
śrotriyānVeda-schooled, authorized reciters
śrotriyān:
veda-pāragānthose who have gone to the far shore of the Veda, Veda-masters
veda-pāragān:

Suta Goswami (narrating Linga Purana teachings to the sages of Naimisharanya)

FAQs

It frames end-of-year charity—go-dāna, vṛṣotsarga, and feeding qualified śrotriya Brāhmaṇas—as a Shaiva act that supports dharma and invites Śiva’s anugraha (grace), preparing the devotee for steadier Linga-pūjā.

Implicitly, Śiva is Pati (the Lord) who is pleased by bhakti expressed through dhārmic giving; such acts help loosen pasha (bondage) around the pashu (individual soul) and orient one toward liberation through right conduct.

Ritual charity practices: go-dāna (cow-gift), vṛṣotsarga (bull release/consecration), and devotional feeding of Veda-qualified Brāhmaṇas—supportive disciplines that complement Shaiva sādhanā rather than a specific yogic technique.