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Shloka 11

आभ्यन्तरध्यान-तत्त्वगणना-चतुर्व्यूहयोगः

Adhyaya 28

विना यथा हि पितरं मातरं तनयास्त्विह न जायन्ते तथा सोमं विना नास्ति जगत्त्रयम्

vinā yathā hi pitaraṃ mātaraṃ tanayāstviha na jāyante tathā somaṃ vinā nāsti jagattrayam

جس طرح اس دنیا میں باپ اور ماں کے بغیر اولاد پیدا نہیں ہوتی، اسی طرح سوم کے بغیر تینوں لوک قائم نہیں رہتے۔

vināwithout
vinā:
yathājust as
yathā:
hiindeed
hi:
pitaraṃfather
pitaraṃ:
mātarammother
mātaram:
tanayāḥchildren/sons
tanayāḥ:
tubut/indeed
tu:
ihahere (in this world)
iha:
nanot
na:
jāyanteare born/arise
jāyante:
tathāso/likewise
tathā:
somamSoma, the Moon-deity
somam:
vināwithout
vinā:
nāstithere is not/does not exist
nāsti:
jagat-trayamthe three worlds (earth, atmosphere, heaven)
jagat-trayam:

Suta Goswami (narrating the Purana; internal reference to the doctrine of Soma’s cosmic necessity)

S
Soma
T
Three Worlds (Trailokya)

FAQs

It frames cosmic stability as dependent on Soma—the sacrificial and nourishing principle—implying that Shiva-puja aligned with Vedic order (yajña, soma, rasa) sustains harmony in the worlds, which is a key Purāṇic rationale behind Linga worship.

By highlighting an indispensable sustaining principle behind manifest existence, the verse points to Shaiva Siddhanta’s view that ordered cosmos requires divine governance; Soma functions as a visible support within creation, while Shiva as Pati is the ultimate ground enabling and regulating such supports.

The verse implicitly emphasizes Soma-linked Vedic yajña and devotional observances timed to lunar rhythms; in a Shaiva frame, this supports disciplined puja-vrata and inner steadiness (yoga-niyama) that harmonize the pashu with cosmic dharma.