Vighneshvara-Prashna and Deva-Krita Shiva-Stava
Adhyaya 104
कायान्तस्थामृताधारमण्डलावस्थिताय ते कृतादिभेदकालाय कालवेगाय ते नमः
kāyāntasthāmṛtādhāramaṇḍalāvasthitāya te kṛtādibhedakālāya kālavegāya te namaḥ
سلامٌ لك، يا من تقيم في الدائرة الباطنة من الجسد سندًا لأمريتة، رحيق الخلود. سلامٌ لك، يا من أنت الزمانُ الذي يميّز العصور ابتداءً من كِرتا. وسلامٌ لك، يا من أنت اندفاعُ الزمان وسرعتُه الجارفة.
Suta Goswami (narrating a hymn within the Linga Purana tradition)
It frames Shiva as both the inner yogic support of amṛta (immortality) and the cosmic regulator of Time—so Linga worship becomes meditation on the Pati who transcends yet governs all change.
Shiva is praised as immanent within the body (antaryāmin-like presence) and also as Kāla itself—revealing Shiva-tattva as both the indwelling ground of liberation and the transcendent power that orders the yugas.
It points to inner-maṇḍala contemplation: meditating on Shiva within the body as the amṛta-support (a Pāśupata-oriented yogic focus) while offering namas (salutations) that dissolve pasha through devotion and insight.