Adhyaya 44: Nandikesvara’s Manifestation and Abhisheka; The Rule of Namaskara in Shiva-Nama
शृणुध्वं यत्कृते यूयम् इहाहूता जगद्धिताः श्रुत्वा च प्रयतात्मानः कुरुध्वं तदशङ्किताः
śṛṇudhvaṃ yatkṛte yūyam ihāhūtā jagaddhitāḥ śrutvā ca prayatātmānaḥ kurudhvaṃ tadaśaṅkitāḥ
أصغوا إلى الغاية التي من أجلها دُعيتم إلى هنا، يا من تريدون خير العوالم. فإذا سمعتموها فبنفوسٍ منضبطة أنجزوها بلا شكّ ولا تردّد.
Shiva (as Pati, issuing instruction to the assembled devas/gana-s for jagad-hita)
It frames Shiva’s ājñā (command) as the basis of right action: devotees and divine beings serve jagad-hita with a purified mind, which is the inner spirit behind Linga-pūjā—service offered to Pati without doubt.
Shiva appears as Pati—the sovereign guide who summons beings for cosmic welfare and directs them toward dharmic action; his word steadies the pashu (soul) and loosens pasha (bondage) through clarity and resolve.
The yogic discipline of prayatātman—self-restraint and mental purification—followed by aśaṅkita-kriyā (fearless, doubtless performance of duty), aligning with the Pāśupata ethos of action rooted in Shiva’s injunction.