अविमुक्तक्षेत्रमाहात्म्य — काशी-वाराणसी में मोक्ष, लिङ्ग-तीर्थ-मानचित्र, और उपासना-विधि
अविमुक्तेश्वरे नित्यम् अवसच्च सदा तया सर्वगत्वाच्च सर्वत्वात् सर्वात्मा सदसन्मयः
avimukteśvare nityam avasacca sadā tayā sarvagatvācca sarvatvāt sarvātmā sadasanmayaḥ
In Avimukteśvara weilt Er immerdar—immerdar als das Offenbare und das Unoffenbare. Durch seine Allgegenwart und weil Er das All ist, ist Er der Ātman in allen Wesen, umfassend Sein und Nichtsein.
Suta Goswami (outer narrator; internal context inferred as a mahatmya-style exposition)
It frames the Linga as the sign of Pati who is both manifest (sat) and unmanifest (asat), making worship a means for the pashu (soul) to recognize Shiva as the indwelling Self everywhere, not merely in a single icon.
Shiva is presented as sarvagata (all-pervading) and sarva (the All), therefore sarvātman—the inner Self of all—transcending opposites by encompassing both being and non-being (sadasan-maya).
The verse primarily supports contemplative Pashupata-oriented insight (dhyana/jnana): meditating on Shiva as the all-pervading Sarvatman; ritually, it implies kshetra-smaraṇa and Linga-puja with the understanding that the Lord is present in all states—manifest and unmanifest.