देवैर्विष्णोः शरणागमनम्—शिवलिङ्गस्थापनं, शिवसहस्रनामस्तवः, सुदर्शनचक्रप्रदानं च
योगी योग्यो महारेताः सिद्धः सर्वादिर् अग्निदः वसुर्वसुमनाः सत्यः सर्वपापहरो हरः
yogī yogyo mahāretāḥ siddhaḥ sarvādir agnidaḥ vasurvasumanāḥ satyaḥ sarvapāpaharo haraḥ
Er ist der Yogi—immer im Yoga gegründet—und der, den man durch Yoga erlangt. Er ist Mahāretāḥ, Träger unerschöpflicher göttlicher Potenz; der Vollendete (Siddha); die erste Ursache von allem. Er ist der Spender von Agni (des heiligen Feuers und seiner Kraft), das wahre Vasu (Reichtum) und Vasumanas, von gütigem Sinn. Er ist die Wahrheit selbst, der Tilger aller Sünden, und Hara—der Herr, der die Fesseln nimmt.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva Sahasranama to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It presents Shiva’s liturgical names used in Linga-puja: as the supreme Yogi and the remover of sin and bondage (Hara), it frames worship as purification of the pashu (soul) by surrender to the Pati.
Shiva is portrayed as Satya (ultimate Reality) and Sarvādi (the source of all), simultaneously immanent as Agnida (bestowing sacred fire/energy) and transcendent as Siddha (ever-perfect), who removes pāpa and ultimately pāśa.
The verse highlights Yoga-oriented devotion: Shiva is both Yogī (the archetype of yogic mastery) and Yogya (the proper object of yogic realization), implying Pashupata-aligned practice where inner discipline and Linga worship converge toward liberation.