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Shloka 10

ईशानकल्पवृत्तान्तः तथा लैङ्गपुराणस्य संक्षेप-सूची

पित्र्यं पितॄणां सम्भूतिर् धर्मश्चाश्रमिणां तथा अवृद्धिर्जगतो भूयो देव्याः शक्त्युद्भवस्तथा

pitryaṃ pitṝṇāṃ sambhūtir dharmaścāśramiṇāṃ tathā avṛddhirjagato bhūyo devyāḥ śaktyudbhavastathā

Mula sa Kanya nagmumula ang kaayusan ng mga Pitṛ at ang kanilang mga banal na ritwal; mula sa Kanya rin nagmumula ang dharma na sumusuporta sa mga nananahan sa mga āśrama. Bukod dito, sa pamamagitan ng Kanyang kapangyarihan, ang mga daigdig ay pinananatili at hindi humihina; kaya’t paulit-ulit, ang Śakti ng Diyosa ang nagiging bukal ng pagpapakita.

पित्र्यम् (pitryam)pertaining to the ancestors, ancestral rite/order
पित्र्यम् (pitryam):
पितॄणाम् (pitṝṇām)of the Pitṛs (manes)
पितॄणाम् (pitṝṇām):
सम्भूतिः (sambhūtiḥ)origination, coming into being
सम्भूतिः (sambhūtiḥ):
धर्मः (dharmaḥ)sacred law, sustaining order
धर्मः (dharmaḥ):
च (ca)and
च (ca):
आश्रमिणाम् (āśramiṇām)of those in the āśramas (stages of life)
आश्रमिणाम् (āśramiṇām):
तथा (tathā)likewise
तथा (tathā):
अवृद्धिः (avṛddhiḥ)non-decline, absence of diminution
अवृद्धिः (avṛddhiḥ):
जगतः (jagataḥ)of the world(s)
जगतः (jagataḥ):
भूयः (bhūyaḥ)again, further, moreover
भूयः (bhūyaḥ):
देव्याः (devyāḥ)of the Goddess
देव्याः (devyāḥ):
शक्त्युद्भवः (śakty-udbhavaḥ)arising from Śakti, born of power
शक्त्युद्भवः (śakty-udbhavaḥ):
तथा (tathā)thus/likewise
तथा (tathā):

Suta Goswami (narrating the Purana’s teaching to the sages of Naimisharanya)

D
Devi (Shakti)
P
Pitrs

FAQs

It grounds Linga-worship in a Shaiva cosmology where Devi-Śakti is the operative power of Pati (Shiva), from whom dharma, Pitṛ-rites, and the stability of the worlds proceed—making worship a participation in that sustaining power.

By emphasizing Śakti as the source of manifestation and sustenance, it implies Shiva-tattva as Pati—the transcendent Lord whose immanent efficacy operates through Śakti, maintaining dharma and the cosmic order.

Ritual emphasis falls on Pitṛ-karma (ancestral observances) and āśrama-dharma; yogically, it supports the Pāśupata view that worldly order is upheld by Śakti, which the pashu must align with through discipline and devotion to Pati.