शङ्खचूडवधकथनम् / The Account of Śaṅkhacūḍa’s Slaying
मरीचेस्तनयो धातुः पुत्रो यः कश्यपो मुनिः । स धर्मिष्ठस्सृष्टिकर्त्ता विध्याज्ञप्तः प्रजापतिः
marīcestanayo dhātuḥ putro yaḥ kaśyapo muniḥ | sa dharmiṣṭhassṛṣṭikarttā vidhyājñaptaḥ prajāpatiḥ
摩利支之子为达塔;达塔之子为圣仙迦叶波。那迦叶波至为守法正直,在显化创造之业中成为造化者,奉梵天(Brahmā)之敕命而被立为生主(Prajāpati)。
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadyojāta
Sthala Purana: Genealogical-cosmogonic setup: Marīci → Dhātā → Kaśyapa, appointed Prajāpati by Brahmā for secondary creation; not tied to a Jyotirliṅga locale.
Significance: Teaches cosmic order: even exalted creators (Brahmā, Prajāpatis) operate by higher ordinance—supporting the Siddhānta hierarchy where Pati (Śiva) is ultimate, while Brahmā is a delegated agent within māyā.
Role: creative
Cosmic Event: secondary creation (sarga/pratisarga context implied)
It highlights that cosmic functions like progeny and creation are carried out by righteous beings (Prajāpatis) under divine ordinance, reminding devotees that dharma and obedience to higher order support harmony in the manifest world—while Shiva remains the supreme ground beyond all functions.
By showing that even Brahmā’s creative administration depends on appointed agents, the verse indirectly points to the Shaiva view that all ordered manifestation is sustained by the Supreme (Shiva). Linga worship centers the devotee in that supreme reality beyond the changing roles of creator and created.
The practical takeaway is steadiness in dharma and remembrance of the Lord behind all duties; a fitting practice is daily japa of the Panchākṣarī “Om Namaḥ Śivāya” while offering water to a Shiva Linga, dedicating one’s actions to Shiva as the inner ruler of cosmic order.