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Shloka 1

Adhyaya 89: शौचाचारलक्षणम् — सदाचार, भैक्ष्यचर्या, प्रायश्चित्त, द्रव्यशुद्धि, आशौच-निर्णय

इति श्रीलिङ्गमहापुराणे पूर्वभागे ऽणिमाद्यष्टसिद्धित्रिगुणसंसारप्राग्नौ होमादिवर्णनं नामाष्टाशीतितमो ऽध्यायः सूत उवाच अत ऊर्ध्वं प्रवक्ष्यामि शौचाचारस्य लक्षणम् यदनुष्ठाय शुद्धात्मा परेत्य गतिमाप्नुयात्

iti śrīliṅgamahāpurāṇe pūrvabhāge 'ṇimādyaṣṭasiddhitriguṇasaṃsāraprāgnau homādivarṇanaṃ nāmāṣṭāśītitamo 'dhyāyaḥ sūta uvāca ata ūrdhvaṃ pravakṣyāmi śaucācārasya lakṣaṇam yadanuṣṭhāya śuddhātmā paretya gatimāpnuyāt

یوں شری لِنگ مہاپُران کے پُروَ بھاگ میں ‘اَṇِما وغیرہ اَشٹ سِدھّیاں اور تری گُن سنسار سے پیشتر کی آگ میں ہوم آدی کا بیان’ نامی نواسیواں باب۔ سوت نے کہا—اب میں شَौچ آچار کی علامتیں بیان کروں گا؛ جس کے انُشٹھان سے آتما شُدھ ہو کر وفات کے بعد سچی گتی کو پاتی ہے۔

itithus
iti:
śrī-liṅga-mahāpurāṇein the venerable Liṅga Mahāpurāṇa
śrī-liṅga-mahāpurāṇe:
pūrva-bhāgein the first section (Pūrva-bhāga)
pūrva-bhāge:
aṇimā-ādya-aṣṭa-siddhithe eight yogic attainments beginning with aṇimā
aṇimā-ādya-aṣṭa-siddhi:
triguṇa-saṃsāratransmigratory existence governed by the three guṇas
triguṇa-saṃsāra:
prāk-agnauin the prior/preceding fire (the preparatory rite-fire)
prāk-agnau:
homa-ādi-varṇanamdescription of homa and related rites
homa-ādi-varṇanam:
nāmanamed/called
nāma:
aṣṭāśītitamaḥ adhyāyaḥthe eighty-ninth chapter
aṣṭāśītitamaḥ adhyāyaḥ:
sūta uvācaSūta said
sūta uvāca:
ata ūrdhvamhenceforth/now onward
ata ūrdhvam:
pravakṣyāmiI shall declare
pravakṣyāmi:
śauca-ācārasyaof the conduct of purity
śauca-ācārasya:
lakṣaṇamcharacteristics/definition
lakṣaṇam:
yatwhich
yat:
anuṣṭhāyahaving practised/undertaken
anuṣṭhāya:
śuddha-ātmāone whose inner self is purified
śuddha-ātmā:
paretyaafter departing (after death)
paretya:
gatimthe destined path/state (higher spiritual attainment)
gatim:
āpnuyātmay attain.
āpnuyāt:

Sūta

S
Shiva
A
Agni

FAQs

It frames purity (śaucācāra) as a prerequisite for effective Śiva-upāsanā, implying that external rites like homa and internal cleanliness together refine the pashu (soul) for approaching Pati (Śiva) through Liṅga worship.

By contrasting triguṇa-saṃsāra with the “gati” attained through purification, it implies Śiva-tattva as beyond the guṇas and the cycles of bondage (pāśa), the liberating goal toward which the purified self moves.

Śaucācāra (disciplined purity) is highlighted as the foundational sādhana; it supports ritual acts such as homa and prepares the aspirant for Pāśupata-aligned purification leading to a higher post-mortem gati.