विष्णुचक्रलाभो नाम (अर्धनारीश्वर-तत्त्वं, सती-पार्वती-सम्भवः, दक्षयज्ञविनाशः)
अनादृत्य कृतिं ज्ञात्वा सती दक्षेण तत्क्षणात् भस्मीकृत्वात्मनो देहं योगमार्गेण सा पुनः
anādṛtya kṛtiṃ jñātvā satī dakṣeṇa tatkṣaṇāt bhasmīkṛtvātmano dehaṃ yogamārgeṇa sā punaḥ
Knowing at once that Dakṣa had acted in contempt, Satī—refusing that affront—burned her own body to ashes by the path of Yoga, with yogic fire, and returned again through Yoga’s power. In Śaiva understanding, this reveals the Lord’s Śakti acting beyond pāśa (bondage), relinquishing a form that had become a ground for dishonor to Pati (Śiva).
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya)
It frames Satī’s yogic self-immolation as a dharmic turning point that leads to Śiva’s cosmic reaction and the re-sanctification of worship—showing that true reverence to Pati (Śiva) is the heart of any yajña or Linga-centered devotion.
By highlighting Satī as Śiva’s Śakti acting through Yoga beyond worldly insult, it implies Śiva-tattva as transcendent Pati—unbound by pasha—whose power (Śakti) can withdraw from a form when adharma and contempt arise.
Yoga-mārga with yoga-agni (inner yogic fire): a disciplined withdrawal of prāṇa and consciousness that can culminate in burning the body to ashes—an extreme siddhi motif often associated with Shaiva/Pāśupata yogic mastery.