Adhyaya 63: Daksha’s Progeny, Kashyapa’s Offspring, and the Rishi-Vamshas that Sustain the Worlds
हरश् च बहुरूपश् च त्र्यंबकश् च सुरेश्वरः सावित्रश् च जयन्तश् च पिनाकी चापराजितः
haraś ca bahurūpaś ca tryaṃbakaś ca sureśvaraḥ sāvitraś ca jayantaś ca pinākī cāparājitaḥ
Siya si Hara, ang Tagapag-alis ng pagkagapos; si Bahurūpa, ang may di-mabilang na anyo; si Tryambaka, ang Panginoong may tatlong mata; at si Sureśvara, ang Hari ng mga diyos. Siya rin si Sāvitra, ang panloob na lakas ng Sāvitrī (Gāyatrī) at ng ritong Veda; si Jayanta, ang laging nagwawagi; si Pinākī, ang may hawak ng busog na Pināka; at si Aparājita, ang Pati na di-matatalo, na hindi mapapanaig ng alinmang pasha (tali).
Suta Goswami (reciting the Shiva Sahasranama to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It functions as a set of potent nāmas for japa during liṅga-pūjā, praising Shiva as Pati—Hara who removes pasha and Aparājita who cannot be overcome—thereby orienting worship toward liberation of the pashu (soul).
Shiva is presented as both transcendent and immanent: Bahurūpa (all forms) yet sovereign (Sureśvara), the all-seeing Tryambaka whose jñāna burns ignorance, and the invincible Aparājita who alone can sever bondage.
Nāma-japa (recitation of Shiva’s names) integrated with Vedic sanctity (Sāvitra/Gāyatrī resonance) is implied—supporting Pāśupata-oriented sādhana where mantra and worship purify the pashu and loosen pasha.