Adhyaya 44: Nandikesvara’s Manifestation and Abhisheka; The Rule of Namaskara in Shiva-Nama
दंष्ट्राकरालवदना नित्या बुद्धाश् च निर्मलाः कोटिकोटिगणैस्तुल्यैर् आत्मना च गणेश्वराः असंख्याता महात्मानस् तत्राजग्मुर्मुदा युताः
daṃṣṭrākarālavadanā nityā buddhāś ca nirmalāḥ koṭikoṭigaṇaistulyair ātmanā ca gaṇeśvarāḥ asaṃkhyātā mahātmānas tatrājagmurmudā yutāḥ
他们面貌威猛,獠牙可怖,然恒常不变——觉悟而清净。诸伽内湿伐罗各依自性,等同于亿亿伽那之众;无量大士欢喜而至。
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames the sacred environment around Śiva: linga-pūjā is not isolated devotion but participation in Śiva’s cosmic order (gaṇa-maṇḍala), where purified, awakened attendants gather to uphold the rite and its fruit.
By portraying Śiva’s gaṇeśvaras as both fearsome in form and stainless in consciousness, the verse reflects Śiva-tattva as transcending dualities—terrible to pāsas (bondage) yet pure awareness for the pashu seeking the Pati.
The verse implicitly supports Pāśupata orientation: cultivate nirmalatā (inner purity) and buddhitva (awakened discernment) so the practitioner (pashu) aligns with Śiva’s hosts—an inner gaṇa-sādhana accompanying external linga-pūjā.