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Shloka 24

Adhyaya 34: भस्ममहात्म्यं—अग्नीषोमात्मक-शिवतत्त्वं तथा पाशुपतव्रतप्रशंसा

इमं पाशुपतं ध्यायन् सर्वपापप्रणाशनम् यः पठेच्च शुचिर्भूत्वा श्रद्दधानो जितेन्द्रियः

imaṃ pāśupataṃ dhyāyan sarvapāpapraṇāśanam yaḥ paṭhecca śucirbhūtvā śraddadhāno jitendriyaḥ

凡能自净其身,调伏诸根,具足信心,诵持此帕舒帕塔教法并观想其义——此法能灭尽一切罪业——彼即解脱系缚paśu(个我灵魂)之pāśa(缚索),并被引向Pati、主湿婆的恩光与加持。

imamthis
imam:
pāśupatamPāśupata (Śiva’s doctrine/observance)
pāśupatam:
dhyāyanmeditating (upon)
dhyāyan:
sarva-pāpa-praṇāśanamthe destroyer of all sins
sarva-pāpa-praṇāśanam:
yaḥwhoever
yaḥ:
paṭhetrecites
paṭhet:
caand
ca:
śuciḥ bhūtvāhaving become pure
śuciḥ bhūtvā:
śraddadhānaḥendowed with faith
śraddadhānaḥ:
jita-indriyaḥone who has conquered the senses
jita-indriyaḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating the Linga Purana to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It links Linga-centered Shaiva practice to inner discipline: purity (śauca), faith (śraddhā), and sense-control (jitendriya), declaring that meditative recitation of the Pāśupata teaching removes sin and prepares the worshipper for Śiva’s grace.

Śiva is implied as Pati—the liberating Lord—whose Pāśupata path destroys pāpa and loosens pāśa (bondage), enabling the paśu (individual soul) to move toward purification and liberation through divine grace.

A combined practice of dhyāna (meditation) and pāṭha/japa (devotional recitation) performed with śauca (purity), śraddhā (faith), and indriya-jaya (sense-restraint), characteristic of Pāśupata-oriented discipline.