दारुवनलीला—नीललोहितपरीक्षा, ब्रह्मोपदेशः, अतिथिधर्मः, संन्यासक्रमः
यस्तु दारुवने तस्मिंल् लिङ्गी दृष्टो ऽप्यलिङ्गिभिः युष्माभिर् विकृताकारः स एव परमेश्वरः
yastu dāruvane tasmiṃl liṅgī dṛṣṭo 'pyaliṅgibhiḥ yuṣmābhir vikṛtākāraḥ sa eva parameśvaraḥ
Aquel que en ese Daruvana fue visto como portador del Liṅga, incluso por quienes niegan el Liṅga—y a quien vosotros percibisteis con una forma extraña y turbadora—Él, y sólo Él, es Parameśvara, el Señor Supremo, más allá de toda apariencia.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Daruvana episode; internal voice addressing the forest ascetics)
It asserts that the very being mocked or rejected as “liṅgī” in Dāruvana is truly Parameśvara; thus liṅga is not a mere sign but a revelatory mark of Shiva’s supreme reality.
Shiva is identified as Pati (Parameśvara) who may appear in a “vikṛta” (unfamiliar) form to dissolve ignorance; His supremacy is not dependent on outward form but on His essential lordship over pashu and pasha.
The takeaway is the primacy of liṅga-bhāvanā and liṅga-pūjā—training perception to recognize Pati through the liṅga, rather than judging by external appearances—aligned with Pāśupata-style inner transformation.