दारुवनलीला—नीललोहितपरीक्षा, ब्रह्मोपदेशः, अतिथिधर्मः, संन्यासक्रमः
वृत्तिभिश्चानुरूपाभिस् तान् विभज्य सुतान्मुनिः अग्निष्टोमादिभिश्चेष्ट्वा यज्ञैर्यज्ञेश्वरं विभुम्
vṛttibhiścānurūpābhis tān vibhajya sutānmuniḥ agniṣṭomādibhiśceṣṭvā yajñairyajñeśvaraṃ vibhum
وبعد أن قسّم الموني أبناءه إلى معايش تلائم طبائعهم، أقام أَغْنِشْتُوما وسائر القرابين الفيدية، عابدًا بذلك «يَجْنِيشْفَرا»—شيفا، السيدَ الكلّيَّ النفاذ، ربَّ القربان.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It identifies Shiva as Yajñeśvara—the inner Lord who receives and sanctifies all offerings—showing that even Vedic yajñas culminate in devotion to Shiva, the same Pati worshipped through the Linga.
By calling him vibhu and Yajñeśvara, the verse presents Shiva as all-pervading and sovereign over ritual action—transcendent yet immanent as the indwelling recipient and fruit-giver of sacrifice.
Agniṣṭoma and related śrauta-yajñas are highlighted, framed as Shiva-oriented worship; the takeaway is karma offered to Pati (Shiva) as a purifier of the pashu (soul) from pasha (bondage).