मुनिमोहशमनम्
Pāśupata-yoga, Siddhis, Puruṣa-darśana, Saṃsāra, and Prāṇa-Rudra Pañcāhutī
भूयो मृत्युवशं याति तस्मान्मोक्षः परं सुखम् अथवा ध्यानसंयुक्तो ब्रह्मतत्त्वपरायणः
bhūyo mṛtyuvaśaṃ yāti tasmānmokṣaḥ paraṃ sukham athavā dhyānasaṃyukto brahmatattvaparāyaṇaḥ
One who again falls under the dominion of Death returns to bondage; therefore mokṣa is the highest bliss. Or else, yoked to meditation and devoted to the true principle of Brahman—understood as the supreme Lord (Pati), Śiva—one attains that liberating state beyond rebirth.
Suta Goswami (narrating the teaching on liberation within the Linga Purana discourse)
It frames Linga-centered Shaiva practice as liberation-oriented: without turning to moksha through Shiva (Pati) contemplation, the paśu remains subject to death and repeated return.
By identifying the liberating focus as “brahma-tattva,” it points to Shiva as the supreme reality (Pati-tattva) whose realization through dhyāna yields paramasukha beyond mṛtyu’s control.
Dhyāna (meditative discipline) aligned with Brahman/Shiva-tattva—i.e., Pashupata-oriented contemplation that cuts pāśa and leads the paśu toward moksha.