Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma
सस्यचौरा भविष्यन्ति दृढचैलाभिलाषिणः चौराश्चोरस्वहर्तारो हर्तुर्हर्ता तथापरः
sasyacaurā bhaviṣyanti dṛḍhacailābhilāṣiṇaḥ caurāścorasvahartāro harturhartā tathāparaḥ
Se volverán ladrones de grano, codiciando vestiduras gruesas y costosas. Los ladrones robarán a los ladrones; un bandido despojará a otro, y otro saqueará al saqueador—así se multiplicará el lazo (pāśa) en la era de decadencia, cuando el pashu (alma atada) olvida la norma de Pati (el Señor).
Suta Goswami
It frames Kali-yuga as an age where greed and mutual predation intensify; Linga-worship is implied as a remedial return to Pati (Shiva), reducing pāśa through devotion, restraint, and dharmic living.
By contrast: when souls (pashus) lose alignment with Pati, disorder spreads. Shiva-tattva stands as the steady sovereign principle of order and liberation, against which the instability of desire-driven life is revealed.
Not a specific rite, but the ethical foundation required for Shiva-puja and Pashupata discipline—sense-restraint, non-stealing (asteya), and curbing craving—so the pashu can loosen pāśa and turn toward Pati.