रुद्राक्ष-माहात्म्य
Rudrākṣa Māhātmya — The Greatness of Rudraksha
मणिबंधे द्वादशद्विस्कंधे पंचशतं वहेत् । अष्टोत्तरशतैर्माल्यमुपवीतं प्रकल्पयेत्
maṇibaṃdhe dvādaśadviskaṃdhe paṃcaśataṃ vahet | aṣṭottaraśatairmālyamupavītaṃ prakalpayet
Sa pulsuhan (maṇibandha) ay magsuot ng labindalawang butil ng Rudrākṣa; sa itaas na bisig (skandha) ay magsuot ng limangdaan. At sa isang daan at walo, buuin ang kuwintas na mala at pati ang banal na sinulid (upavīta), upang maihanay sa katawan ang mga tanda ng debosyon kay Śiva.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
Significance: Rudrākṣa arrangements (wrist/shoulders/upavīta) function as ‘pāśa-bheda’ supports—disciplining the embodied soul (paśu) toward Śiva (Pati) through constant remembrance.
Type: stotra
It teaches embodied devotion: by wearing Rudrākṣa in prescribed counts, the devotee continually remembers Pati (Śiva), and disciplines the body as an instrument of bhakti and purity leading toward liberation.
Rudrākṣa and the Śaiva upavīta are external supports for Saguna-Śiva worship, helping the devotee maintain constant reverence while performing Linga-pūjā, japa, and daily duties with Śiva-centered identity.
It suggests Rudrākṣa-dhāraṇa (wearing Rudrākṣa) and preparing a 108-bead mālā for japa—typically aligned with chanting the Pañcākṣarī mantra, “Om Namaḥ Śivāya.”