Adhyaya 45: Rudra as Sarvatma—Seven Lokas, Seven Talas, and the Cosmic Body of Shiva
पृथिवी चान्तरिक्षं च स्वर्महर्जन एव च तपः सत्यं च सप्तैते लोकास्त्वण्डोद्भवाः शुभाः
pṛthivī cāntarikṣaṃ ca svarmaharjana eva ca tapaḥ satyaṃ ca saptaite lokāstvaṇḍodbhavāḥ śubhāḥ
La Tierra, la región intermedia (atmósfera), el cielo, Maharloka, Janaloka, Tapoloka y Satyaloka: estos siete mundos auspiciosos nacen del Huevo cósmico. En la comprensión śaiva, tales ámbitos ordenados pertenecen a la creación manifestada, donde el alma atada (paśu) se mueve bajo el lazo (pāśa) hasta volverse hacia el Señor (Pati), Śiva, para la liberación.
Suta Goswami (narrating the cosmological teaching within the Linga Purana framework)
By listing the seven lokas as products of the brahmāṇḍa, the verse frames all worship—including Linga-pūjā—as a means for the paśu (soul) to rise beyond the created hierarchy and seek Pati (Shiva), who transcends these realms.
Indirectly: it describes the structured, auspicious manifested cosmos, implying a higher, unmanifest Lord who is not limited to any loka. In Shaiva Siddhanta terms, Shiva as Pati is distinct from and sovereign over the created worlds where paśus wander under pāśa.
No single rite is named, but the teaching supports Pashupata-oriented sādhanā: using worship and yoga to move from identification with loka-bound existence toward detachment (vairāgya) and Shiva-realization beyond cosmological levels.