दक्षयज्ञध्वंसः—वीरभद्रप्रेषणं, देवविष्ण्वोः पराजयः, पुनरनुग्रहः
जघान मूर्ध्नि पादेन दक्षं चैव यशस्विनम् चिछेद च शिरस्तस्य ददाहाग्नौ द्विजोत्तमाः
jaghāna mūrdhni pādena dakṣaṃ caiva yaśasvinam cicheda ca śirastasya dadāhāgnau dvijottamāḥ
Entonces lo golpeó con el pie en la coronilla a Dakṣa, el ilustre; le cercenó la cabeza y la arrojó al fuego del sacrificio—oh el mejor de los dos veces nacidos—y así el yajña quedó arruinado por el decreto irresistible del Señor (Pati).
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya; describing the Daksha-yajna episode)
It shows that yajña without reverence to Śiva (Pati) collapses; Linga-worship emphasizes inner surrender and right recognition of the Lord over mere external ritual performance.
Śiva-tattva is portrayed as the sovereign ordinance that overrules pride-bound ritualism; the Lord breaks the pasha of arrogance and restores dharma by revealing the futility of ego-centered sacrifice.
The implied practice is purification of yajña through Śiva-bhakti and Pāśupata orientation—disciplining the pashu (individual soul) to relinquish ahaṅkāra, the key pasha (bondage), before undertaking worship.