Adhyaya 75: Nishkala–Sakala Shiva, Twofold Linga, and the Supremacy of Dhyana-Yajna
कर्मयज्ञरताः स्थूलाः स्थूललिङ्गार्चने रताः असतां भावनार्थाय नान्यथा स्थूलविग्रहः
karmayajñaratāḥ sthūlāḥ sthūlaliṅgārcane ratāḥ asatāṃ bhāvanārthāya nānyathā sthūlavigrahaḥ
أمّا المنهمكون في العمل الطقسيّ والقرابين—الذين يبقى فهمهم خارجيًّا غليظًا—فإنهم يلتذّون بعبادة اللِّينغا الغليظ (الظاهر). ولأجل إنماء البهاكتي والتأمّل القويم في العقول غير المُهذَّبة، شُرِعت الصورة المتجسّدة الغليظة؛ وليس الأمر على غير ذلك.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Linga Purana teaching to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It explains why the manifest (sthūla) Liṅga is taught: it stabilizes devotion and contemplation (bhāvanā) for those still oriented to external ritual (karma-yajña), serving as a valid step in Shaiva sādhanā.
It implies Shiva as Pati is ultimately beyond limitation, yet compassionately accessible through a gross, worshipable form for pashus bound by pasha—so they can mature from outer form to inner realization.
Sthūla-liṅga arcana—formal Liṅga pūjā aligned with karma-yajña—used as a preparatory discipline that refines the mind toward steadier bhāvanā and later, subtler Shaiva contemplation.