क्षुपस्य विष्णुदर्शनं, वैष्णवस्तोत्रं, दधीचविवादः, स्थानेश्वरतीर्थमाहात्म्यं
दिव्यं त्रिशूलम् अभवत् कालाग्निसदृशप्रभम् दग्धुं देवान्मतिं चक्रे युगान्ताग्निरिवापरः
divyaṃ triśūlam abhavat kālāgnisadṛśaprabham dagdhuṃ devānmatiṃ cakre yugāntāgnirivāparaḥ
وتجلّى رمحٌ ثلاثيٌّ إلهيّ، متوهّجًا كَنارِ الزمان. وظهر آخر كحريقِ نهايةِ العصر، فعزم على إحراق الآلهة، كاشفًا عن قوة الفناء الجارفة التي لا يحكمها في النهاية إلا پَتي (شيفا).
Suta Goswami (narrating the Purana to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames Śiva’s sovereignty as Pati: even devas are not ultimate; the Linga signifies the Lord beyond time, whose power can withdraw the cosmos like yugānta-agni.
By invoking kālāgni and yugānta-agni imagery, it points to Śiva-tattva as the supreme regulator of time and dissolution—terrifying to limited beings, yet the final authority over creation and withdrawal.
The verse primarily teaches tattva: recognizing Pati’s supremacy over pasha-bound powers; in Pāśupata-oriented practice, it supports vairāgya and surrender (śaraṇāgati) to Śiva as the only refuge beyond kala.