Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 53

Shivamurti–Pratishtha Phala: Shivalaya-Nirmana, Kshetra-Mahatmya, Tirtha-Snana, and Mandala-Vidhi

वापीकूपतडागाश् च शिवतीर्था इति स्मृताः स्नात्वा तेषु नरो भक्त्या तीर्थेषु द्विजसत्तमाः

vāpīkūpataḍāgāś ca śivatīrthā iti smṛtāḥ snātvā teṣu naro bhaktyā tīrtheṣu dvijasattamāḥ

O pinakamainam sa mga dalawang-ulit na isinilang, ang mga balon, balong-hagdan (stepwell), at mga lawa ay inaalala bilang mga Śiva-tīrtha, mga banal na pook-paligo ni Śiva. Kapag ang tao’y naligo sa mga tīrtha na iyon nang may bhakti, lumalapit siya sa biyaya ni Śiva—pinapaluwag ang mga tali ng pāśa na gumagapos sa paśu (ang indibidwal na kaluluwa) at inihaharap ang isip sa Pati, ang Panginoong Śiva.

vāpīstepwell/reservoir
vāpī:
kūpawell
kūpa:
taḍāgāḥponds/tanks
taḍāgāḥ:
caand
ca:
śiva-tīrthāḥShiva’s sacred fords/pilgrimage-waters
śiva-tīrthāḥ:
itithus
iti:
smṛtāḥare remembered/declared
smṛtāḥ:
snātvāhaving bathed
snātvā:
teṣuin those
teṣu:
naraḥa man/person
naraḥ:
bhaktyāwith devotion
bhaktyā:
tīrtheṣuin the sacred places/waters
tīrtheṣu:
dvija-sattamāḥO best of the twice-born (Brahmin sages).
dvija-sattamāḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It expands Shiva-bhakti beyond temple ritual by declaring even common water-sources as Shiva-tīrthas; bathing with devotion becomes an act of Shiva-oriented purification supporting Linga worship.

Shiva is implied as Pati—the Lord whose grace can be accessed through bhakti; sacredness is not merely geographic but arises from devotion that turns the pashu toward Shiva and away from pāśa (bondage).

Tīrtha-snana (devotional bathing) is highlighted as a purificatory upacāra that steadies the mind for Shaiva discipline—supporting Pashupata-style inner purification through outward sacred observance.