विष्णुचक्रलाभो नाम (अर्धनारीश्वर-तत्त्वं, सती-पार्वती-सम्भवः, दक्षयज्ञविनाशः)
प्राहिणोति स्म तस्यैव ज्ञानं ज्ञानमयो हरः विश्वाधिको ऽसौ भगवान् अर्धनारीश्वरो विभुः
prāhiṇoti sma tasyaiva jñānaṃ jñānamayo haraḥ viśvādhiko 'sau bhagavān ardhanārīśvaro vibhuḥ
Dann übermittelte Hara—dessen Wesen reines Bewusstsein ist—ihm allein jenes befreiende Wissen. Dieser selige Herr, der allgegenwärtige Ardhanārīśvara, steht jenseits des ganzen Kosmos als Pati und verleiht jñāna, das die Fesseln (pāśa) des paśu durchtrennt.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Purana; reporting Shiva’s bestowal of jnana within the embedded narrative)
It frames Shiva as jñānamaya—worship of the Liṅga is not only ritual (kriyā) but a means to receive Shiva’s grace-born knowledge that dissolves bondage and leads the paśu toward liberation.
Shiva is presented as both transcendent (viśvādhika—beyond the cosmos) and immanent (vibhu—all-pervading), and as Ardhanārīśvara, indicating the inseparable unity of Shiva (Pati) and Shakti in the bestowal of jñāna.
The verse highlights jñāna-dīkṣā in spirit—Shiva’s transmission of saving knowledge—aligned with Pāśupata Yoga where inner realization, supported by devotion and worship, breaks pāśa and reveals Pati.