क्रमान्मननपर्यंते साधनेऽस्मिन्सुसाधिते । शिवयोगो भवेत्तेन सालोक्यादिक्रमाच्छनैः
kramānmananaparyaṃte sādhane'sminsusādhite | śivayogo bhavettena sālokyādikramācchanaiḥ
جب یہ سادھنا بتدریج منن کی منزل تک خوب اچھی طرح سِدھ ہو جائے، تو اسی سے شِویوگ—شیو سے یکجائی—پیدا ہوتا ہے؛ پھر آہستہ آہستہ ترتیب کے ساتھ سالوکْی وغیرہ کی حالتیں بھی حاصل ہوتی ہیں۔
Suta Goswami (narrating the Vidyeshvara teachings to the sages at Naimisharanya)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Sthala Purana: Not a jyotirliṅga legend; it articulates the graded fruition of sādhana: śivayoga and then sālokya-ādi mukti in sequence—language resonant with Purāṇic and Siddhānta soteriology.
Significance: Maps the pilgrim’s inner ascent: disciplined practice culminates in communion with Śiva and progressive liberation-states (sālokya, etc.), emphasizing grace and maturation.
Role: liberating
It teaches a graded Shaiva path: sustained practice culminating in manana (deep contemplative assimilation) ripens into Śiva-yoga, after which liberation unfolds in stages beginning with sālokya.
In the Vidyeshvara context, disciplined worship and contemplation of Saguna Śiva (often through Linga-upāsanā and mantra) matures the devotee’s consciousness, leading toward direct communion (Śiva-yoga) and progressive liberation.
It points to a stepwise sādhana culminating in contemplative meditation (manana)—typically supported in this Samhita by Shiva-mantra japa (notably the Panchakshara), focused worship of the Linga, and steady inner recollection of Śiva.