देवैर्विष्णोः शरणागमनम्—शिवलिङ्गस्थापनं, शिवसहस्रनामस्तवः, सुदर्शनचक्रप्रदानं च
त्रिलोकात्मा त्रिलोकेशः शुद्धः शुद्धी रथाक्षजः अव्यक्तलक्षणो व्यक्तो व्यक्ताव्यक्तो विशांपतिः
trilokātmā trilokeśaḥ śuddhaḥ śuddhī rathākṣajaḥ avyaktalakṣaṇo vyakto vyaktāvyakto viśāṃpatiḥ
He is the very Self of the three worlds and the Lord of the three worlds. He is the Pure One and the Purifier. He is rathākṣaja—unshaken like the axle of a chariot. Marked by the Unmanifest, He is also the Manifest; He is both manifest-and-unmanifest, and the sovereign Lord of all peoples.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Shiva Sahasranama to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames the Linga as Shiva’s paradoxical presence—both unmanifest (avyakta) and manifest (vyakta)—guiding the devotee to worship the visible symbol while contemplating the formless Pati beyond all worlds.
Shiva is declared the trilokātmā (immanent Self within all realms) and trilokeśa (transcendent Lord), simultaneously pure and purifying, and both manifest and unmanifest—indicating Pati who pervades yet exceeds prakṛti and its bonds.
A Pāśupata-style contemplation is implied: meditate on Shiva as the inner Self and sovereign Lord, using the Linga as the manifest support (ālambana) while realizing the unmanifest reality that purifies the pashu from pāśa.