Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma
दुःखेनाभिप्लुतानां च परमायुः शतं तदा दृश्यन्ते न च दृश्यन्ते वेदाः कलियुगे ऽखिलाः
duḥkhenābhiplutānāṃ ca paramāyuḥ śataṃ tadā dṛśyante na ca dṛśyante vedāḥ kaliyuge 'khilāḥ
في عصر كالي تُغمر الكائناتُ بالألم؛ وحتى أقصى العمر حينئذٍ لا يتجاوز مئة سنة. وتُرى الفيداتُ كلُّها—ومع ذلك لا تُرى حقًّا—لأن معناها يُحجَب ويُلتبس.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames Kali-yuga as a time when scriptural vision is weakened; Linga-worship becomes a direct, accessible upāya to approach Pati (Shiva) when Vedic meaning is ‘seen yet not seen’.
By implying that true sight of the Veda is inner realization, it aligns with Shiva-tattva as the revealer of jñāna: when the Pashu’s cognition is clouded by Pāśa, only Pati’s grace restores right vision.
Not a specific rite is named, but the takeaway supports Kali-yuga practice: steady Shiva-bhakti with Linga-pūjā and Pashupata-oriented discipline to counter sorrow, short life, and loss of discernment.