पञ्चाक्षर-षडक्षरमन्त्र-माहात्म्यम् | The Greatness of the Pañcākṣara/Ṣaḍakṣara Mantra
नमस्कारादिसंयुक्तं शिवायेत्यक्षरत्रयम् । जिह्वाग्रे वर्तते यस्य सफलं तस्य जीवितम्
namaskārādisaṃyuktaṃ śivāyetyakṣaratrayam | jihvāgre vartate yasya saphalaṃ tasya jīvitam
ผู้ใดที่ปลายลิ้นมีอักษรสาม “ศิ-วา-ยะ” ประกอบด้วยการนอบน้อม “นะมะห์” สถิตอยู่เนืองนิตย์ ชีวิตของผู้นั้นย่อมเป็นสิริมงคลและสัมฤทธิ์ผลแท้จริง।
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
Sthala Purana: Not a Jyotirliṅga account; it praises nāma/mantra on the tongue (jihvāgre) as making life ‘saphala’ (fruitful), aligning with bhakti as constant remembrance.
Significance: Encourages nāma-japa as a portable tīrtha: the tongue becomes the altar, and life gains sacred purpose through continual utterance.
Mantra: namaḥ śivāya (with the opening namaskāra; the verse highlights śi-vā-ya)
Type: panchakshara
Role: nurturing
It declares that a life becomes truly fruitful when the devotee keeps the Panchakshara’s core (“śivāya”) united with reverent salutation (namaḥ) constantly on the tongue, indicating steady bhakti, purity of speech, and uninterrupted remembrance that draws Śiva’s grace.
The mantra “namaḥ śivāya” is a primary Saguna upāsanā in the Shiva Purana, commonly chanted before the Śiva-liṅga; by keeping the mantra alive in speech, the devotee maintains an inner worship that complements outer liṅga-pūjā.
Regular japa of “namaḥ śivāya” (especially with mindful pronunciation and restraint of speech), ideally paired with daily Śiva-pūjā such as liṅgābhiṣeka, wearing/using rudrākṣa for counting, and maintaining bhasma/tripundra as a Shaiva discipline.