Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma
एवं युगाद्युगस्येह संतानं तु परस्परम् वर्तते ह व्यवच्छेदाद् यावन्मन्वन्तरक्षयः
evaṃ yugādyugasyeha saṃtānaṃ tu parasparam vartate ha vyavacchedād yāvanmanvantarakṣayaḥ
وهكذا في هذا العالم يستمر تعاقبُ يوغا بعد يوغا في تتابعٍ متبادل، جارياً وفق تقسيماتٍ مقدَّرة حتى يكتمل المانفنترا. وفي هذا الجريان المنظَّم للزمن يبقى باتي—الرب شيفا—أساسًا لا يتبدّل، بينما تتحرّك الباشو (الأرواح) في دوراتٍ متكرّرة تحت قيود (باشا) الكارما.
Suta Goswami
It frames cosmic time as an ordered succession of yugas up to a manvantara, reminding the devotee that while time and worlds change, devotion to the Liṅga anchors the paśu (soul) to the timeless Pati (Śiva).
Though the verse speaks of yuga-sequence, its Shaiva import is that Śiva as Pati is the steady ground of kāla: cycles unfold in divisions, but Śiva-tattva is not diminished by the passing of yugas and manvantaras.
No specific rite is named; the takeaway aligns with Pāśupata discipline—cultivating detachment from cyclical time (kāla) and karma (pāśa) through steady Śiva-bhakti and inner recollection of the Pati.