Adhyaya 34: भस्ममहात्म्यं—अग्नीषोमात्मक-शिवतत्त्वं तथा पाशुपतव्रतप्रशंसा
कृतमेतद्वहत्यग्निर् भूयो लोकसमाश्रयात् असकृत्त्वग्निना दग्धं जगत् स्थावरजङ्गमम्
kṛtametadvahatyagnir bhūyo lokasamāśrayāt asakṛttvagninā dagdhaṃ jagat sthāvarajaṅgamam
وبعد أن أتمّ ذلك الفعل، عاد أغني (النار) يتّقد من جديد، متّخذًا من العوالم ملجأً؛ ومرّة بعد مرّة، بتلك النار عينها، يُحرَق الكون كلّه—الثابت والمتحرّك. وفي هذا الاحتراق الدوريّ يُسحَب العالم المقيّد كـ(پشو) إلى الانطواء بلهيب كالا، تحت سيادة پتي، شيفا.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames the cosmos as cyclic and perishable—burned again and again—so Linga worship turns the devotee from transient lokas toward the imperishable Pati (Śiva) represented by the Linga.
Though Agni is named, the teaching aligns with Shiva-tattva as the supreme governor of time and dissolution: the world of pashus and pashas is periodically withdrawn under the higher sovereignty of Pati.
A Pāśupata-oriented takeaway is vairāgya (dispassion): contemplating repeated cosmic burning supports inner renunciation, steadiness in japa/dhyāna on Śiva, and non-attachment to worldly supports (loka-āśraya).