Adhyaya 23: श्वेत-लोहित-पीत-कृष्ण-विश्व-कल्पेषु रुद्रस्वरूप-गायत्री-तत्त्ववर्णनम्
पञ्चमस्तु जनस्तत्र षष्ठश् च तप उच्यते सत्यं तु सप्तमो लोको ह्य् अपुनर्भवगामिनाम्
pañcamastu janastatra ṣaṣṭhaś ca tapa ucyate satyaṃ tu saptamo loko hy apunarbhavagāminām
هناك يُسمّى المقامُ الخامس «جانا-لوكا»، ويُعلَن السادس «تابا-لوكا». وأما السابع فهو حقًّا «ساتيا-لوكا»—مقامُ السائرين إلى «عدم الرجوع»، المتجاوزين للولادة المتكررة بنعمة شيفا بوصفه «پَتي»، الربّ الذي يقطع «پاشا» (القيد) عن «پاشو» (النفس).
Suta Goswami (narrating the cosmology of lokas to the sages of Naimisharanya)
By mapping the higher lokas (Jana, Tapa, Satya), the verse frames Linga-worship as a Shaiva sadhana that purifies the pashu (soul) and leads it beyond mere heavenly enjoyment toward apunarbhava—non-return—through the grace of Pati (Shiva).
Shiva-tattva is implied as the liberating Lord (Pati) whose sovereignty extends beyond cosmological hierarchy; even Satya-loka is meaningful as a station for those oriented to liberation, which culminates by transcending pasha (bondage) through Shiva’s anugraha (grace).
The verse points to tapas (austerity) and truth-aligned living (satya) as inner disciplines—core to Pashupata-oriented sadhana—supporting the soul’s ascent toward non-return rather than mere worldly or heavenly attainment.