Adhyaya 17: लिङ्गोद्भव—ब्रह्मविष्ण्वहङ्कार-शमनं, ओंकार-प्रादुर्भावः, मन्त्र-तत्त्वं च
अथ दृष्ट्वा कलावर्णम् ऋग्यजुःसामरूपिणम् ईशानमीशमुकुटं पुरुषास्यं पुरातनम्
atha dṛṣṭvā kalāvarṇam ṛgyajuḥsāmarūpiṇam īśānamīśamukuṭaṃ puruṣāsyaṃ purātanam
ثم أبصروا الربّ متلألئًا بالبهاء الإلهي، متجسّدًا في صور رِغ ويَجُس وسامَا من الفيدات؛ فرأوا إيشانا، الحاكم الأعلى المتوَّج بتاج السيادة، القديمَ الذي وجهُه هو البوروشا الكوني—ذلك البَتي الأوّل المتعالي عن الزمان.
Suta Goswami (narrating the vision within the Linga’s manifestation narrative)
It frames the manifested Linga as the visible disclosure of Pati (Shiva) who is Veda-svarūpa—so Linga-darśana is not mere symbol-worship but direct reverence to the Lord who is the ground of Vedic revelation.
Shiva is presented as Īśāna (the supreme ruler), primordial and transcendent, yet immanent as the very form of the Vedas—indicating that Shiva-tattva is both beyond time and the inner meaning of sacred knowledge.
The key practice implied is darśana and dhyāna of the Linga as Veda-svarūpa Pati—centering awareness on Shiva as the liberating Lord who severs Pāśa (bondage) of the Paśu (soul).