देवैर्विष्णोः शरणागमनम्—शिवलिङ्गस्थापनं, शिवसहस्रनामस्तवः, सुदर्शनचक्रप्रदानं च
व्याघ्रचर्मधरो व्याली महाभूतो महानिधिः अमृताङ्गो ऽमृतवपुः पञ्चयज्ञः प्रभञ्जनः
vyāghracarmadharo vyālī mahābhūto mahānidhiḥ amṛtāṅgo 'mṛtavapuḥ pañcayajñaḥ prabhañjanaḥ
هو لابسُ جلدِ النمر؛ ربُّ القوّة الأفعوانية؛ الحقيقةُ العُنصرية العظمى وكنزُ الوجود الواسع. أعضاؤه لا تموت وصورته خالدة. هو يَجْنَا الخمسة بعينه، وهو الريحُ العاصفة التي تُحطِّم كلَّ القيود.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva’s Sahasranama to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It presents Shiva as both ascetic and cosmic—tiger-skin-clad yet the very essence of yajña—teaching that Linga-puja unites renunciation with Vedic sacred duty, leading the pashu (soul) toward Pati (the Lord).
Shiva is described as the immortal reality (amṛtāṅga, amṛtavapuḥ) underlying the mahābhūtas, and as mahānidhi—the inexhaustible ground of consciousness and power that sustains and liberates.
The verse points to pañca-yajña as a daily discipline, and implies Pashupata Yoga’s aim: through worship and inner practice, the Lord as prabhañjana breaks pasha (bondage) so the pashu attains liberation.