Adhyaya 75: Nishkala–Sakala Shiva, Twofold Linga, and the Supremacy of Dhyana-Yajna
चरणौ चैव पातालं समुद्रस्तस्य चांबरम् देवास्तस्य भुजाः सर्वे नक्षत्राणि च भूषणम्
caraṇau caiva pātālaṃ samudrastasya cāṃbaram devāstasya bhujāḥ sarve nakṣatrāṇi ca bhūṣaṇam
العوالمُ السُّفلى هي حقًّا قدماه؛ والمحيطُ لباسُه. وجميعُ الدِّيفات أذرعُه، والكوكباتُ زينتُه. هكذا يُتَصَوَّرُ البَتي الشاملُ لكلّ شيء، الذاتُ الباطنةُ للكون، في الرؤية الشيفية لِلِّينغا بورانا.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Linga Purana to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It supports Linga-upasana by training the mind to see all realms as pervaded by Shiva (Pati), so worship is not confined to a place or object but becomes all-encompassing contemplation centered on the Linga as the sign of the Infinite.
Shiva is presented as the immanent ground of the cosmos: worlds, oceans, Devas, and stars are His very limbs and ornaments—indicating His sovereignty as Pati, with the universe functioning within Him rather than apart from Him.
A contemplative limb of Pashupata-oriented practice: Virat-dhyana (cosmic-form meditation), where the practitioner dissolves limited identity (pashu-bhava) by visualizing the entire universe as Shiva’s body while offering mental worship.