उपलेपनादिकथनम्
Vastraputa-jala, Ahimsa, and Conduct in Shiva Worship
न यज्ञार्थं स्त्रियो ग्राह्याः सर्वैः सर्वत्र सर्वदा सर्ववर्णेषु विप्रेन्द्राः पापकर्मरता अपि
na yajñārthaṃ striyo grāhyāḥ sarvaiḥ sarvatra sarvadā sarvavarṇeṣu viprendrāḥ pāpakarmaratā api
يا أفضل البراهمة، لا ينبغي أخذ النساء لتوظيفهن كقرابين في طقوس الياجنا الفيدية - من قبل أي شخص، في أي مكان، وفي أي وقت، وفي أي فارنا (طبقة) - حتى لو كن مكرسات لأعمال آثمة.
Suta Goswami (narrating dharma-vidhi to the sages of Naimisharanya, with inferred internal smriti-style injunction tone)
It marks a boundary between Vedic yajña roles and Shaiva devotion: even if Vedic sacrificial eligibility is restricted here, Linga-Puja and Shiva-bhakti are understood in the Linga Purana as accessible through devotion and inner purity, aiming at release of the paśu from pāśa under Pati (Shiva).
Indirectly: Shiva-tattva is the supreme Pati beyond ritual formalism; the verse highlights that external yajña has strict injunctions, while Shaiva Siddhanta emphasizes Shiva’s lordship over karma and bondage—granting grace that ultimately liberates the soul beyond mere sacrificial merit.
A Vedic-yajña eligibility injunction is foregrounded; by contrast, the implied Shaiva takeaway is to prioritize Shiva-Puja (Linga-archana) and Pashupata-oriented inner discipline (niyama, purity, mantra, and devotion) rather than relying solely on sacrificial participation.