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Shloka 34

Adhyaya 75: Nishkala–Sakala Shiva, Twofold Linga, and the Supremacy of Dhyana-Yajna

यथा शिवस् तथा देवी यथा देवी तथा शिवः तस्मादभेदबुद्ध्यैव सप्तविंशत्प्रभेदतः

yathā śivas tathā devī yathā devī tathā śivaḥ tasmādabhedabuddhyaiva saptaviṃśatprabhedataḥ

جیسے شِو ہے ویسی ہی دیوی ہے؛ اور جیسے دیوی ہے ویسا ہی شِو ہے۔ اس لیے اگرچہ اُنہیں ستائیس طرح کے بھیدوں سے بیان کیا گیا ہے، پھر بھی اُن کی غیر دوئی—یعنی اَبھید بُدھی—ہی قائم رکھنی چاہیے۔

yathājust as
yathā:
śivaḥLord Shiva (Pati)
śivaḥ:
tathāso, in the same way
tathā:
devīthe Goddess (Shakti)
devī:
tasmāttherefore
tasmāt:
abheda-buddhyāwith the cognition of non-difference (abheda-jñāna)
abheda-buddhyā:
evaindeed/alone
eva:
saptaviṃśattwenty-seven
saptaviṃśat:
prabhedataḥby way of distinctions/classifications
prabhedataḥ:

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

S
Shiva
D
Devi (Shakti/Parvati)

FAQs

It establishes that worship of the Linga is worship of the one reality that is simultaneously Shiva (Pati) and Shakti (Devi); the devotee should perform puja with abheda-buddhi, not as two competing deities.

Shiva-tattva is presented as inseparable from Shakti—Shiva is not a solitary principle but the same supreme reality expressed with power (Shakti); distinctions are pedagogical, while the truth is non-difference.

The key practice is abheda-buddhi (non-dual contemplation) during puja and Pashupata-oriented meditation—seeing beyond enumerated categories into the unity of Pati with Shakti, which loosens pasha (bondage) for the pashu (soul).