Adhyaya 71: पुरत्रयवृत्तान्तः—ब्रह्मवरदानम्, मयकृतत्रिपुर-निर्माणम्, विष्णुमाया-धर्मविघ्नः, शिवस्तुति, त्रिपुरदाहोपक्रमः
तदा सस्मार वै यज्ञं यज्ञमूर्तिर्जनार्दनः यज्वा यज्ञभुगीशानो यज्वनां फलदः प्रभुः
tadā sasmāra vai yajñaṃ yajñamūrtirjanārdanaḥ yajvā yajñabhugīśāno yajvanāṃ phaladaḥ prabhuḥ
Da gedachte Janārdana, dessen eigene Gestalt das Opfer ist, an den Yajña. Als Herr—selbst der Opfernde, der Genießer der Darbringung und der Souverän—verleiht er den Ausführenden die Frucht der Riten; und im śaivischen Verständnis ruht jede Ritualfrucht letztlich in Pati, Śiva, dem inneren Lenker des Yajña.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Purana to the sages; internal reference to Janardana/Vishnu)
It frames sacrifice as a manifestation of the Lord and teaches that the fruit of any rite is granted by the supreme Īśa; thus, Linga-pūjā is understood as worship of the inner master of all yajñas, not merely an external ritual.
By using titles like Īśāna and “giver of fruits,” it points to Pati-tattva: the sovereign consciousness that governs karma and dispenses results. Even when Janārdana is named, the Shaiva reading emphasizes the one Lord who is the inner ruler of Yajña and the ultimate source of phala.
Vedic yajña is highlighted, with the key takeaway that ritual efficacy depends on the Lord as phala-dātā; in Pāśupata-oriented practice, one moves from seeking ritual fruits to seeking liberation (mokṣa) from pāśa (bondage) through devotion to Pati.