शिवतत्त्वे परापरभावविचारः
Inquiry into Śiva’s Principle and the Parā–Aparā Paradox
छेदितं तारकस्यापि शिरश्शक्रभिया सह । स्तुतिं चक्रुर्विशेषेण हरिधातृमुखाः सुराः
cheditaṃ tārakasyāpi śiraśśakrabhiyā saha | stutiṃ cakrurviśeṣeṇa haridhātṛmukhāḥ surāḥ
Khi đầu của Tāraka đã bị chém lìa, nỗi sợ của Indra cũng bị dứt bỏ; rồi chư thiên—do Hari (Viṣṇu) và Dhātṛ (Brahmā) dẫn đầu—đã dâng lời tán thán tối thượng một cách đặc biệt.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Significance: The cutting of fear along with the demon’s head exemplifies Śiva’s grace removing pāśa (bondage) symbolically; pilgrimage and stuti are portrayed as the devas’ immediate response to liberation from terror.
Type: stotra
Role: liberating
Offering: pushpa
It portrays a Shaiva Siddhanta theme: when adharma is destroyed, fear (a form of bondage) subsides, and the devas respond with stuti—devotional recognition of Pati’s grace as the power that restores dharma.
The devas’ praise reflects Saguna worship—approaching the Lord through attributes and divine acts. In Purāṇic practice, such stuti naturally culminates in Linga-centered devotion, acknowledging Shiva as the accessible form through which protection and liberation are granted.
The takeaway is stuti and japa: offer heartfelt praise and repeat the Panchakshara (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) as a fear-dispelling discipline, supported by simple Shaiva observances like vibhūti (tripuṇḍra) and inward surrender.