Adhyaya 89: शौचाचारलक्षणम् — सदाचार, भैक्ष्यचर्या, प्रायश्चित्त, द्रव्यशुद्धि, आशौच-निर्णय
देवैस्तुल्याः सर्वयज्ञक्रियास्तु यज्ञाज्जाप्यं ज्ञानमाहुश् च जाप्यात् ज्ञानाद् ध्यानं संगरागादपेतं तस्मिन्प्राप्ते शाश्वतस्योपलम्भः
devaistulyāḥ sarvayajñakriyāstu yajñājjāpyaṃ jñānamāhuś ca jāpyāt jñānād dhyānaṃ saṃgarāgādapetaṃ tasminprāpte śāśvatasyopalambhaḥ
All sacrificial rites (yajña) are said, in merit, to be comparable to the gods. Yet higher than sacrifice is japa; higher than japa they declare is liberating knowledge; and higher than knowledge is meditation (dhyāna), free from attachment and entangling passion. When that meditation is attained, there arises direct realization of the Eternal—Pati, Śiva.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Linga Purana teaching to the sages of Naimisharanya, summarizing the Shaiva path of inner ascent)
It places outer yajña (ritual) below inner disciplines—japa, jñāna, and especially nirāsaṅga-dhyāna—implying that true Linga worship culminates in inward meditation on Śiva (Pati) beyond mere external offerings.
Śiva is indicated as the “Śāśvata” (Eternal) who is not merely reached by ritual merit but realized directly when the pashu’s mind becomes free from saṅga-rāga (attachment and passion) through dhyāna.
A graded Shaiva sādhanā: yajña → mantra-japa → jñāna (discriminative insight) → dhyāna devoid of attachment, aligning with Pāśupata-oriented inner practice where liberation comes by cutting pasha (bondage) through steady contemplation.