Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma
नात्यर्थं धार्मिका ये च तान् सर्वान् हन्ति सर्वतः वर्णव्यत्यासजाताश् च ये च ताननुजीविनः
nātyarthaṃ dhārmikā ye ca tān sarvān hanti sarvataḥ varṇavyatyāsajātāś ca ye ca tānanujīvinaḥ
A quienes no están verdaderamente firmes en el dharma, a todos ellos los destruye por doquier; y también destruye a los nacidos de la confusión de los órdenes sociales, junto con quienes viven dependiendo de ellos.
Suta Goswami
It frames Shiva (Pati) as the purifier of the field of dharma, removing adharma and social-spiritual disorder—an inner prerequisite for sincere Linga-puja and Pashupata discipline.
Shiva-tattva is shown as the governing Lord who restrains chaos: when pashus become bound by pasha through unrighteous living, Shiva acts as the cosmic regulator who dissolves those forces that obstruct dharma.
The implied practice is ethical purification (yama-like restraint) as part of Pashupata orientation—rejecting adharma and dependency-based living so that worship and yoga are grounded in sattvic conduct.