Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma
नीचस्येव तदा वाक्यं वदन्ति विनयेन तम् उच्चासनस्थान् शूद्रांश् च द्विजमध्ये द्विजर्षभ
nīcasyeva tadā vākyaṃ vadanti vinayena tam uccāsanasthān śūdrāṃś ca dvijamadhye dvijarṣabha
Then, O bull among the twice-born, they address him with humble words as though he were of low station—especially those Śūdras seated on high seats amid the assembly of the twice-born.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages; addressing a dvija listener within the narrative frame)
It frames inner and outer discipline as a prerequisite for Shiva-upasana: arrogance, seat-pride, and disrespect in sacred assembly are forms of pasha (bondage) that obstruct the pashu’s fitness for Linga-puja and grace (anugraha) from Pati, Shiva.
Indirectly, it contrasts worldly status-games with dharmic humility; in Shaiva Siddhanta, Shiva-tattva is the impartial Pati beyond varna and ego, while the pashu bound by pasha manifests as condescension and disorder in conduct.
The implied practice is yama-like restraint (vinaya, humility, disciplined speech) as preparatory sadhana—supporting Pashupata-oriented purification before mantra, puja, and participation in sacred discourse.