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ASPECTS OF SAIVA WORSHIP -M.ARUNACHALAM

The goals of life in the Vaidika society are laid down as four dharma, artha, kama, moksa - virtue, wealth, happiness and release; they are called aram, porul, inbam and vidu in Tamil. Of the four, the last, the attainment of release from all earthly bonds, is held supreme. In Saivism, three entities are considered to be eternal: God(Pati), Soul(Pasu), and Bonds(Pasa). The soul is in a state of bondage with the worldly matter; the bonds are three and are here inseperable from the soul and obstruct it from enjoying eternal bliss with God. Release is the severance of the bonds resulting in the eternal enjoyment of that bliss. This severance can result only througn God's grace. Avoidance of evil deeds and the performance of meritorious acts in this birth will earn merit for the doer, which in the proper time will make him fit to receive Siva's grace. The greatest act of merit is the worship of Siva. Worship is called Puja; for the follower of Siva, the

Siva-puja is most important. The Karanagama explains the meaning of the term Puja.

puryante sarvakarmani

jayate jnanam atmani

puranajjayate yasmat

puja sabdam ihocyate.

It is that by which all acts become full(or perfect) and that which confers jnana(wisdom).

Siva of the Saiva religion is also the absolute of Saiva metaphysics. Siva the Absolute has no form and no attributes. The mind of man cannot grasp one which has no form. Man likes to pray to God, to supplicate to Him, and to desire ultimate union with Him to enjoy eternal bliss. To satisfy this desire on the part of man, Siva is conceived of in three aspects: the formless, the formless-form, and the form. These three are called the arupa, ruparupa and rupa aspects. The arupa aspect is the All-pervasive, All-knowing one, who is beyond the sensory perception of man. The ruparupa aspect is the sivalinga; its is not any manifested form of Siva, nor is it formless, because we have before us here a concrete piece of stone; the Sivalinga form is generally the one to which puja is offered in personal worship or in public temple worship. The rupa aspect is the manifest forms of Siva, such as the Chandrasekhara, Bhiksatana, Daksinamurti and the like, which are said

to have been assumed by Siva on different occasions for conferring His Grace on devotees.

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CONTENTS:-

THE IMPORTANCE OF SIVAPUJA

DISCIPLINES OF WORSHIP

IDOL WORSHIP OR SYMBOLISM

THE SIGNIFICANCE OF SOME PUJA RITUALS

THE RITUAL OF WORSHIP

THE SYNTHESIS IN SIVA WORSHIP

THE IMPORTANCE OF SIVA PUJA:

Tradition and literature in India have always emphasized the transient nature of earthly life and insisted that the individual seeking enlightenment must strive for liberation from the earthly bonds and for ultimate union with the Eternal One. The aim of all education and the goal of all human aspirations have ever been this, and every school of thought in the land has evolved its own disciplines for the attainment of this goal. Saivism, as the oldest school of thought in the land, has laid down that Siva-puja is the most appropriate sadhana for a harmonious exercise of thought, word and deed, in the path of God. When these three faculties in the human personality work in unison for a single purpose, naturally integration of the mind with the spirit and union with the object result.

The influence of Siva-puja on the lives of the Saivas is also manifest in another way. Thousands of Siva temples dot the TamilNadu and there is a temple in every small village. Siva-puja is daily offered there on the agamic lines; festivals are also conducted there throughout the year; hundred of temples are renovated at great cost even in these days of cold reason and nihilism; every ritual is conducted, not on any modernised or revolutionary lines, but only on the lines laid down in the agamas, some twenty centuries ago. All these are standing monuments to the glory of the agamic worship and the pulsating vitality of their regulations regarding Siva-puja.

The presence of God should always govern the actions of human-beings. The Siva-puja are intended only as a reminder of this presence. The agama lays down. "A man may even dare to give up his life or cut off his own head; but let him not dare to take a single morsel of food without performing Siva-puja."

Man cannot live without surrendering himself to a higher being; this was recognised even by Sankara, hailed as the greatest exponent of advaita; he is known to have helped to re-establish the six schools of worship and so he has come to be hailed as the Sanmata-sthapanacarya; he had felt the need for an upasana-murti for man to give him inward peace.

CONTENT

DISCIPLINES OF WORSHIP

The pathway to God realisation in saivism has been set in four stages, so that man can easily comprehend it. They are carya, kriya, yoga and jnana; they are primarily conceived as a course of exercises for the organs of man's body- the karmendriyas like the body, hand, leg, tongue etc., the jnanendriyas like the eye, etc., and the mind. The religious observances are intended to make every action of the sadhaka(spiritual aspirant) progress godward. The pathway is one whole and it is an integrated synthesis of all the four stages.

Worship is part of the second stage kriya, called the path of action; it is so called because, of the four, this calls for the largest number of exercises. The exercises here are both physical and mental, and they are intended to effect bodily and mental purification and also symbolic purification of the soul. Carya and kriya correspond to the external worship, while yoga and jnana correspond to an internal worship, worship in the heart. Siva is all-pervasive and the worshipper has always this all-pervasiveness in his mind. hence he extends his love to all beings and if possible serves all beings and never harms any. He cannot therefore be a party to killing and so abstains from meat-eating. The term Saiva in later day society, even up to the present day, has come to mean one who obstains from meat-eating, a vegetarian.

The other disciplines for the worshipper are the sacred ash and the rudraksa beads. He is expected to smear the ash in the specified places on his body and wear the beads round his neck at the time of the Siva puja, if not always. He should always utter the name of Siva, not only during the puja-kriya, but at other times also.

A qualified guru initiates him into the puja. The qualifying ceremony is called diksa or initiation. The guru teaches him in detail the ritual of the puja, instructs him in the japa he has to perform for life, and also gives him a Sivalinga which he shall worship daily for life.

Worship invokes all the three faculties-thought, word and deed. Thought is the process of the contemplation of God as abiding in the Siva-linga-murti; word is the mantras uttered during the puja, the name japa and the words of prayer; deed is the various acts connected with the actual puja.

Even in the matter of this ritualistic worship, the devotion in the heart is held to be more important than the rituals themselves. To give one example, Rules regarding the gathering of the flowers are very strict. Buds which have not yet opened, flowers whose petals have been eaten by worms, flowers which have fallen to the ground etc., are not to be taken and used. But yet we find exceptions have been made in the sastras themselves. Arulnandi Sivacarya, the second acarya of Saiva Siddhanta, in the course of his large treatise, Siva-jnana-siddiyar, lays great emphasis on the worship of Siva in the heart and adds:

"If one desires to worship God externally, let him just take the flowers which have fallen from the tree and worship the Supreme Siva here on some external symbol, just as He is worshipped in the heart through jnana"(302). We find the rigidity of the rules relaxed here. Again, fragrant flowers are generally considered the best for worship. But actually, the erukku, the flower of the poisonous calotropis plant is considered a favourite with Siva. Says Avvai, in the Purananuru verse of two thousand years ago: "Leave alone the fragrant and the non-fragrant flowers; the gods would not refuse even the trivial erukku for Worship; it is well known that a blade of the common grass is a favourite petal for Siva. These go to indicate that external worship is merely a token of the great love and surrender which should reign in the heart.

JNANA-PUJA

RITUALISTIC-PUJA

CONTENT

JNANA-PUJA:

Siva-puja generally implies only the ritualistic external worship. This is for the lay initiate. But a mental worship is also spoken of in the sastras. It is a relationship between the aspirant and the Spoken of in the sastras. It is a relationship between the aspirant and the Supreme Being. Outward adjuncts do not exit here. There need not be even any mantra or ritual. This is called the jnana way. Here the worshipper, out of extreme devotion in his heart, converts his heart inot a temple for him. He has advanced several steps in the pathway to God and so this worship through contemplation is possible for him.

Here the worshipper contemplates Siva as the universal Self, the indivisible whole, the Supreme with the threefold attributes of Truth, knowledge and Bliss(Sat-cit-ananda). Mentally he merges his self with the Self in an inseparable union and contemplates that advaita state; only such a person is capable of performing the jnana-puja, which is kriya under jnana: The jnani looks upon all the elements and tattvas as transient and shelters himself under divine grace. He sees all things through grace, contemplates on the pancaksara-mantra, beginning with the letter Si(as in the form Sivaya-namah) and visualises His all-pervasiveness. Such a worship is the jnana-puja. Among the Saiva nayanmars, Vayilar nayanar of Mayilapur performed this jnana-puja and attained union with Siva. Another nayanar, by name Pusalar not only performed a mental puja, but constructed a temple for Siva mentally and even performed a mental kumbhabhiseka therefor; the all-knowing Siva knew of

it, and in order to make his devotion known to others, told the ruling king, Rajasimha Pallava(688-705 A.D.) of Kanci, in a dream, that He was going to be present at the kumbhabhiseka ceremony of Pusalar's temple and so the King had to postpone to some other suitable day his kumbhabhiseka of the Kanci Kailasanatha temple(newly built by him) fixed for that day itself. Naturally this was a great recognition for the mental construction and puja of Pusalar. People may consider this to be mere legend. But this is recorded in an inscription of the King himself, where he is called 'he who heard the voice from the heavens.'

CONTENT

RITUALISTIC-PUJA:

Ritualistic puja is external worship of Siva; this can be performed only on three objects: the stamba, the bimba and the kumbha.(Agamic Siva-puja cannot be performed for a picture or for a cakra.). The stamba is the pillar, the Siva-linga form; the bimba is the image of a murti; and the kumba is the pot of water where Siva is invoked by mantras and whose water is later used up in the process of consecration or anointing. The bimba worship as a ritual is generally confined to the temple. In agamic worship in the Siva temple, bimba worship is only secondary or auxillary; the main worship is only to the linga form. The kumbha worship is performed on particular occasions only. For example, on the occasion of a consecration or kumbhabhisekam ceremony of a Siva temple, pots of water called kumbhas are installed in respect of each of the deities in the temple, the god of each is invoked to abide in the respective pot by the utterance of the mantras and by kriyas;

regular puja is done to the kumbha as though it were the deity itself, and ultimately the kumbha water is poured on the image of the deity with appropriate mantras, the deity is replaced on the image by the mantras, and puja performed. Kumbha-puja is confined generally to such occasions.

This ritualistic or ceremonial Siva-puja is again of three categories- the svartha(atmartha)puja, the kamya-puja and the parartha-puja.

SVARTHA-PUJA

KAMYA-PUJA

PARARTHA-PUJA

CONTENT

SVARTHA-PUJA:

Svartha-Siva-puja is the worship of Siva in the form of a Siva-linga received from the guru at the diksa ritual. The linga so given may be metal or of sphatika(glass-like rock crystal). The worshipper always keeps this linga in a special box, takes it out at the time of worship and replaces it in the box after worship. This linga is a permanent one. This has all the three feature of the Siva-linga which we see in the temple- a piece of short cylindrical rod called bana with a rounded top, inserted in the middle of a wider circular piece called the avudaiyar having a pedestral or base called the pitha. The three components are together known as the Siva-linga.

Svartha-puja is performed also an another class of linga which is not permanent. When a permanent linga is not obtainable at the time of initiation, the aspirant is empowered to worship Siva on a temporary linga. Usually freshly ground sandal paste is utilised by the worshipper to make a linga on the spot; he improvises it as best as he can; this obviously cannot have all the material. This improvised linga is called the ksanika-linga (made at the ksana moment). A little sandal or even a flower can be used as ksanika-linga. All the puja-kriyas are done to this linga except abhiseka (bathing) which is only done symbolically (bhavana). At the end of the puja when, the permanent linga is taken and restored to the box, Siva abiding in the ksanika-linga is disolved into the heart of the worshipper, and the material of the linga discarded. The ksanika-linga may be replaced at a convenient later date by a permanent linga, with due rituals.

The Siva-linga is called Sadasiva, the symbol of pranva, the primordial nada Om. The Sanskrit word linga means a symbol. Although the linga is no doubt a symbol of Siva, it is considered during worship not as a symbol but as Siva Himself. The all-pervasive being is present here, for the duration of the puja, to confer His Grace on the devotee. All puja and all prayers go to Siva and not to the symbol. The Siva-linga is the Sakala-niskala form (the form-form-less) assumed by Siva to help the individual in dhyana and bhavana.

In svartha-puja, it is always the Siva-linga that receives all worship. The devotee may conceive of the Siva-linga as any of his ista-murti personal favourite deity, such as Ayyarappa, Maha-linga, Kapalisvara, etc., but the worship is always to the linga. Again, although Ganesa, Subramaniya and Gauri(sakti) are worshipped here, they are not different from Siva; they are here merely different aspects of Siva; where they are worshipped seperately, they are conceived as other manifest forms of Siva; they are not separate or different entities in worship.

When a worshipper performs this svartha-siva-puja, it is for himself, for his own welfare. Welfare does not mean wordly gain. The worshipper always strives for release-liberation form all bonds - and union with the self. Hence the goal of this puja is moksa, and never bhoga. All prayer is only towards this end.

KAMYA-PUJA:

The second category of puja is the kamya-puja. This is performed for achieving a particular object. What are generally known as santt ceremonies are all kamya-puja. But rules lay down that the aspirant shall not perform any kamya-puja, worship with bhoga as its object. Kamya-puja should not be done in the temple. However, human nature being what it is, people would certainly go to the temple and cause puja, to be performed on their behalf, for material gain, for long life, for cure of physical illness and the like. But it has been clearly defined that the temple as a public place is not intended for these purposes.

PARARTHA-PUJA:

The third category is parartha-puja. This is the worship of Siva (the Siva-linga) in the temple of the village or town, where all classes of the people can congregate. In temple worship, it is the Siva-linga that occupies the centre of the temple and to whom all worship is offered; the presence of other deities in the temple is immaterial. Most of the Siva shrines in Tamilnadu are very ancient. They have all been in existence for more than a thousand years. The places where the nayanmars worshippeed had been in existence even a further five hundered years earlier. Tirumangai Alvar, the Vaishnava saint sings that Kochengat Chola had built seventy shrines for Siva. No one knows who consecrated these temples and when. All these show the great antiquity of the temples and when. Many are svayambhu; where, in the ages past, Siva manifested Himself of His own will in the form of just a piece of stone under a tree; the period was beyond human knowledge. When men

happened to see this later, they built a temple round the linga and the tree became the sthala-vrksa. Other lingas had been installed by rsis, by the devas and by men. The worship of these lingas in the temple is called parartha-puja (parartha-for the others, the public).

The purpose of parartha-puja is laid down in the agamas as two fold; one, the long life and health of the king, his prosperity and victory in battle; and two, the welfare and prosperity of the village. In modern times, the ruler and the ruled have merged into one in the name of democracy; hence the two purposes mentioned have also merged into one. Still, we can find a second object, namely, the upholding of the nobler values in the life of man and the training of man in love and compassion to fellow beings, in selflessness and righteousness. As things are today, temple worship has to take up this duty as a challenge and carry it on for a long time to come.

Liberation from bonds and attainment of bliss, or inseparable union with Siva, are said to be the goal of Siva-puja. Training one to lead a good life even, in this birth has to be added on as a necessary goal now. Man has lost his moorings and there is no pilot to guide him safely across the turbulent waters of the ocean of life. Religion and community worship are the forces which can, in some measure, restore those moorings.

Any one can perform the svatha-puja in his home, provided he has the initiation; this is purely personal to him. But the parartha-puja, done in the temple for the welfare of all, can be done only by a Sivacarya.

CONTENT

IDOL WORSHIP OF SYMBOLISM:

Ritualistic worship does not mean idol worship. When the deity is invoked through the chanting of the appropriate mantra, the agama ritual clearly lays down three steps: the asana, the murti and the murti-man. Asana is the seat offered to the deity. The second step is the murti; this is the object which the deity is requested to be present in. It is not God but God is requested to appear and abide temporarily in this object. The third invocation is to the deity or the particular god-murtiman; this is not the image, but is God whom we pray to appear before us and to condescend to accept the puja offered. Thus the three mantras for the invocation make it unmistakably clear that it is not the image that is worshipped, but some other force to which the image serves as a temporary residence. Presuming we are worshipping Ganesa here, the invocations will be: Ganesa-sanaya-namah, Ganesa-murthaye namah, Ganessaya namah. These steps in the invocation will make clear

the position in idol worship. Saivism has idols in its worship but it does not do idol worship.

The worshipper never says that he is worshipping the image or the idol. Even while offering flowers to the image before him, or to the handful of sand, etc. He is simply saying that he is worshipping Ganesa or Siva. But the worshipper is not conscious of the image or the idol; He says and feels that he is worshipping the Supreme being, as Ganesa or Siva, not as an idol.

Siva worship reaches beyond and goes further to the Supreme idea that is sought to be invoked in the idol. The mind of man which functions only through the senses and the other internal organs cannot at all reach Suddha-Siva, the nirguna (without attributes, who is immutable and transcendental). Hence to satisfy these organs and to give them some concrete object on which to focus the senses and the organs to begin with, the form of Siva the Saguna (with attributes) was invented by our forefathers. This is installed in different forms in the temple so that the limited mind of man may comprehend the Unlimited Being in the symbol. The image or the Siva-linga is only a symbol. It is not God or Siva. It is a symbol intended to point to the Being beyond. All thought goes to that Being through the symbol.

When many concentrate their thoughts on the image in the temple the concentrated thought-effect of large congregations of devotees endows it with a great potency for grace and succour. It gets hallowed as the abode of Divinity and, as generations roll by, this potency for aid and succour is indeed felt by succeeding generations of worshippers.

CONTENT

THE SIGNIFICANCE OF SOME PUJA RITUALS:

The term puja signifies purification and perfection, and the spiritual illumination resultant therefrom. The meaning attached to the various acts connected with puja are also expressive of this meaning. Just as abhiseka (bathing) creates external or physical cleansing, so it causes also an inner cleaning, when it is accompanied by the necessary bhavana (thought) and the mantra. Colours have their own effect not only on human beings but also on animals; we speak of a red rag, not a rag of any other colour. Red has always been a symbol of warning, while green is the symbol of pleasure, welfare, and bounty. Black, the colour of darkness is associated with mourning in the west, while white is always the colour of purity and of peace.

It is no wonder therefore that special virtues are attributed to the colours of flowers used in Siva worship. White is always the best, and suited for the evening and night worship; this is also relevant because at these parts of the day, there will not be the sun's light and every thing will be dark; only white flowers will be easily visible. White flowers are said to help the worshipper to salvation. Crimson-hued flowers are used at noon and they are of the rajasa quality and they confer wordly pleasures on the worshipper. Similarly, each individual type of flowers is considered to be efficacious in a particular way. Bits of leaf, green in colour can always be used in the absence of flowers during all parts of the worship. Flowers should always appear on the crest of the Siva-linga. They are placed there thrice as puspanjali. This signifies the incoming of Siva-bodha in the place of atma-bodha resulting in the removal of the three sections of karma-agami,

sancita and prarabdha.

Silken garments are superior and they confer long life in this birth and also in future lives. Garment for the image signifies the removal of the tirodhana-sakti, the force of obscuration. The ringing of the bell, incense, light, mudra, etc., signify that the self does not any longer look on the material world but tries to dwell in the Siva-bhoga granted to it. The dhupa signifies the kriya-sakti and waving the dhupa means the symbolic removal of the power of anava. The dipa is light, and it means the removal of the fear of death and of evil karmas, and the conferment of illumination. naivedya, by the process of dedication of cereals and pulses, confers prosperity and plenitude of foodstuffs. The camphor that is burnt has a special quality and naturally has a special meaning. It is pure white in colour, and when it is burnt it takes on the hue of agni (fire), and it burns itself out completely, without residue, and becomes onewithe the akasa. White is the

colour of the sattivika-guna, Agni or red colour is symbolic of Sivahood. So camphor signifies that the self takes on the sattvika-guna, leaves off its limited state, takes on the all-pervasive state of Siva, and becomes one with Him without any separate existence.

These are merely illustrative. They may be extended to every one of the various parts of the ritualistic Siva-puja.

CONTENT

THE RITUAL OF WORSHIP:

The Siva-puja is said to be suryadi-Candanta: from Surya to Candesvara. It has six parts: they are Surya-puja, Atma-puja, Sivalinga aradanam, Agni-puja, Guru-puja and the Candesa-puja. Surya is worshipped first; because the formless Siva (the niskala) manifests Himself to the mortals in the form of Surya (the sakala). Atma-puja is the antaryaga worship of the Siva who abides in the worshipper as the soul's soul. The external worship (bahir-yaga-puja) is valid only if the antaranga-puja is performed.

An asana is prepared for Siva and He is invoked with the proper mantras, corresponding kriyas and appropriate mudras, to appear, to be present in the Sivalinga placed thereon and to accept the worship offered. The invocation is called avahana, which itself consists of a series of rites. For these, three concepts are important. They are the mudra, the nyasa, and the mantra.

MUDRA:

For every small act performed during Siva-puja, a mudra has been prescribed. A mudra is a gesture of pose of the hand, where either hand or both the hands and fingers perform a particular figure or symbolic form. This is said to be appropriate to the kriya concerned, and is also said to please the particular devata. The mudra is shown with the appropriate mantra in front of the linga.

NYSASA:

Nyasa is placing and assignment of the various parts of the body to the different devatas, with the appropriate mantras. The physical body, which is gross matter, is not qualified to perform worship to Siva. So, it has to be made fit for the puja, Siva-hood has to be conferred on it. The simple nyassa are two- the kara-nyasa and the anga-nyasa. By uttering the mantras and touching the parts of the hands and the parts of the body, Siva is invoked and mode to abide in the two hands and in the various parts of the body. Hands are particularly important because they perform all the kriyas in the puja. Thus Siva-hood is sought to be affected on the whole body. Similarly by other nyasas, Siva the Universal Self is invoked, and placed on the Siva-linga. Now the symbol worshipped is Siva and the worshipper is also Siva.

MANATRA:

There is no kriya in Siva-puja without a mantra; the term mantra signifies 'protection to him who meditates' (or utters the mantra). The mantra signifies the capacity to know all and the capacity to cross the ocean of samsara. The first requisite for puja is of course thought; then follows deed, the kriya, to the accompaniment of the utterance, which is the mantra. There is a gayatri mantra for every section of Hinduism; for Siva worship there is a Siva-gayatri-mantra.

JAPA:

After every puja there is a japa. Japa is a repetition of the Lord's name; this is symbolised by a mantra, a word or words or syllables set in a certain order. The japa in a Siva-puja is not aimed at any wordly or mundane gain, but is aimed at final liberation; it is always spiritual. Having as its object the attainment of final union with God. The mantra transcends language; the mere sound of the mantra has great potency for conferring the desired object on he who repeats it. In the ancient past, great seers who had realisation had an experience of the Supreme Being. In their effort to give a form to that Supreme, they could not find words; they used sound for expressing the form which they had perceived. That sound-form has been handed down to us in the name of mantras. Thus the mantra or the Divine name, in the form of a given formula. So to say, has the power to mould the consciousness of the utterer spiritually and evolve it along the godward path. The

repetition prepares him for the spiritual revelation of experience and ultimately, depending on recognised that sound has form. When the sound that was perceived as the form of a deity or God by the seers in the remote past and was handed down to us, pulsating with life and power, is repeated by us with faith and loving devotion, the deity concerned reveals itself to us even through that sound-body. The same realisation which the seers had of God in the form of the mantra, the sound-body, can still be had by him who performs the japa of the mantra.

DHYANA:

After japa, there is a dhyana, contemplation of Siva. God is the only reality and all our endeavours and activities are perforce directed to it. If people are to contemplate Him; there must be something for most people, to grasp with the mind. The mind cannot contemplate abstract concepts; nor can it conjure up any mental picture, where there is no substantial form (or image) on which it can concentrate its thought. God has no form, and so cannot be contemplated. Hence seers of the past have given definite form not to God, but to the qualities attributed to God. These forms take concrete shapes in the images worshipped. The form of Nataraja, for instance, is just a symbolic representation of the various qualities attributed to God in Saiva-Siddhanta (viz. the five functions, etc).

The dhyana after japa has always this aim. When the worshipper utters the dhyana - sloka, he becomes aware of the form evoked by the dhyana-sloka; it is just a description in a simple and picturesque language of the form of the deity worshipped. The utterance of the sloka evokes in his mind a mental picture of the deity; this in turn evokes in his mind an awareness of the attributes or contemplation helps to produce in his mind through the concrete image a mental picture, which in turn takes him to the sphere of abstract conception of God. In this manner this dhyana helps to lift him up to unknown planes of spiritual experience, even though the known concrete experience.

CONTENT

THE SYNTHESIS IN SIVA WORSHIP:

The worship trains the sadhaka in concentration and in the co-ordination of thought, word and deed. The left hand rings the bell; the right shows dhupa or dipa, or places flowers; the lips utter the kriya mantras; the mind dwells on the ritual performed by these three organs. In Siva-puja, the entire personality of the worshipper is fully brought into focus. It is not as though he is simply performing a mechanical ritual. All his faculties are made to play a conscious part in the various little acts of the puja.

In every installation and puja in atmartha worship, there are three in-separable functions-bhavana (thought), mantra (word) and kriya (action) Bhavana is to imagine or conceive of the Being worshipped as actually inhabiting the concrete object installed for worship, such as the image linga, handful of sand or sandal, kalasa or even a flower; this is a mental process involving the exercise of thought. The second function is the utterance of the mantra, i.e., uttering the appropriate mystic syllables which are calculated, to welcome and install that Being in the object chosen; this is a vocal process. The third is the kriya - actual ritualistic puja - the various detailed actions connected there with such as inviting the honoured guest to step in, to be seated, to accept service, food etc., to listen to prayers and so on; this is a process involving action done mostly with the hands. Thus it is evident that all the faculties of the worship per find full expression

in the puja; and self purification in the physical, mental and psychic planes is the first direct and wholesome outcome of the Siva-puja.

The greatest synthesis is this integration of thought, word and deed through bhavana, mantra and kriya. Development of personality is an important aim of educators in this century; it consists of an integrated development of the three faculties of body, mind and soul. It is indeed amazing that such an integration is sought to be effected in the spiritual sphere, through worship, by a meaningful synthesis of bhavana, mantra and kriya.

All the details of the Siva-puja are sought to be related to one or the other of the basic concepts of Saivism. Siva's function for the succour and liberation of the souls are fivefold; acts of service to Siva in the puja are related to these functions. The abhiseka denotes creation; naivedya of the offering of food denotes preservation; bali(sacrificial offering of food) signifies dissolution; the showing of light denotes obscuration and finally the ritual of agni-karya or homa signifies the bestowal of grace.

Puja is again an expression of trancendent humanism in the practice of the Saiva religion. No Siva-puja, is complete without a Candesa-puja as the last item. Candesa was just a small human boy who tended cows and who was raised to the celestial region for his intense love of God. At the end of all Siva-puja, a go-puja, worship of the cow, is prescribed. Rsabha deva, the bull mount of Siva also to be worshipped. There is invariably the worship of the sthala-vrkas, worship of the particular tree or plant in the place, under whose shade Siva was considered to have manifested Himself in the ages past.

Siva worship as laid down in the agamas has come to stay. It seems to have satisfied a thrist of the people to reach God-realisation, not through total renunciation, but even through the enjoyment of the good things of life. It appears to have succeeded marvellously and perpetuated a system of worship, which had stood the test of time. The parartha-Siva-puja is still going strong, and today, in the latter half of the twentieth century, it continues to be the bedrock on which the edifice of family and society stands.

geovisit(); for more details

visit www.geocities.com/shivaperuman

 

 

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