Praṇava-Māhātmya and the Twofold Mantra (Sūkṣma–Sthūla) in Śaiva Sādhanā
सूक्ष्ममेकाक्षरं विद्यात्स्थूलं पंचाक्षरं विदुः । सूक्ष्ममव्यक्तपंचार्णं सुव्यक्तार्णं तथेतरत्
sūkṣmamekākṣaraṃ vidyātsthūlaṃ paṃcākṣaraṃ viduḥ | sūkṣmamavyaktapaṃcārṇaṃ suvyaktārṇaṃ tathetarat
سُوکھم کو ایکاکشر (اوم) جاننا چاہیے اور ستھول کو پنچاکشر (نَمَہ شِوای) کہتے ہیں۔ سُوکھم اَویَکت پنچارْن تَتْو ہے، اور دوسرا واضح حروفی صورت میں پوجا کے لیے ظاہر ہے۔
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Tatpuruṣa
Mantra: oṃ (ekākṣara, praṇava) ; namaḥ śivāya (pañcākṣara)
Type: panchakshara
Role: teaching
It teaches that Shiva’s mantra has two levels: the subtle inner essence as Oṁ (praṇava) and the accessible manifest practice as the five-syllabled Namaḥ Śivāya—linking contemplation (sūkṣma) with devotional worship (sthūla).
The manifest syllabled form supports Saguna/Liṅga-oriented upāsanā through audible japa, while the subtle level points to Shiva as the unmanifest reality behind the same mantra—uniting form-based worship with inner realization.
Practice pañcākṣarī-japa (“Namaḥ Śivāya”) as the outward discipline, and cultivate inner absorption in praṇava (“Oṁ”) as the subtle contemplation—ideally alongside Shaiva observances like bhasma (tripuṇḍra) and Rudrākṣa as supportive aids.