देवैर्विष्णोः शरणागमनम्—शिवलिङ्गस्थापनं, शिवसहस्रनामस्तवः, सुदर्शनचक्रप्रदानं च
मनो बुद्धिरहङ्कारः क्षेत्रज्ञः क्षेत्रपालकः तेजोनिधिर् ज्ञाननिधिर् विपाको विघ्नकारकः
mano buddhirahaṅkāraḥ kṣetrajñaḥ kṣetrapālakaḥ tejonidhir jñānanidhir vipāko vighnakārakaḥ
هو المَنَس (Manas) العقلُ الباطن، والبُدّهي (Buddhi) الفِطنة، والأهَنْكارَ (Ahaṅkāra) إحساسُ «أنا». وهو كْشِتْرَجْنْيَا (Kṣetrajña) عارفُ الحقل (الروح المتجسدة)، وهو أيضًا كْشِتْرَپَالَكَا (Kṣetrapālaka) حارسُ الحقل (الربّ الذي يدبّر التجسّد). وهو تِيجُونِدْهِ (Tejonidhi) كنزُ الإشراق الإلهي، وجْنَانَنِدْهِ (Jñānanidhi) كنزُ المعرفة المُحرِّرة. وهو وِپَاكَ (Vipāka) نُضجُ الكارما إلى ثمارها، وهو وِغْنَكارَك (Vighnakāraka) مُحدِثُ العوائق—يكبح پاشو (paśu) المقيَّد بپاشا (pāśa) ويقوده نحو پَتِي (Pati).
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva Sahasranama to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames Linga worship as inner worship: offering mind (manas), intellect (buddhi), and ego (ahaṅkāra) into Shiva, recognizing him as both the indwelling knower and the sovereign guardian of embodied life.
Shiva-tattva is shown as transcendent-yet-immanent: he pervades the psycho-physical instruments as their power, while also standing as Kṣetrapālaka—the supreme Pati who governs karma’s fruition and grants jñāna that loosens pasha (bondage).
A Pāśupata-oriented discipline of inner purification: observing the play of mind–intellect–ego, surrendering them to Shiva, and accepting karmic vipāka and even ‘obstacles’ as Shiva’s governance that redirects the paśu toward liberation.