वासिष्ठकथनम् (आदित्य–सोमवंशवर्णनम् तथा रुद्रसहस्रनाम-प्रशंसा)
अग्निज्वालो महाज्वालः परिधूम्रावृतो रविः धिषणः शङ्करो नित्यो वर्चस्वी धूम्रलोचनः
agnijvālo mahājvālaḥ paridhūmrāvṛto raviḥ dhiṣaṇaḥ śaṅkaro nityo varcasvī dhūmralocanaḥ
Él es la llama del fuego, el Gran Resplandor; es el Sol velado por el humo que lo circunda. Él es la inteligencia innata, el siempre auspicioso Śaṅkara—eterno, refulgente de esplendor espiritual, y el Señor de ojos de humo cuya mirada consume las ataduras.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva Sahasranama to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames the Liṅga as pure tejas—Shiva’s self-luminous power that burns pasha (bondage) and reveals Pati as the inner light beyond smoke-like veils of ignorance.
Shiva is portrayed as eternal and auspicious (nitya, śaṅkara), simultaneously manifest as blazing transformative fire and as the sun-like consciousness that may appear veiled—yet remains the source of buddhi (dhiṣaṇa) and spiritual radiance (varcas).
The verse supports Pāśupata-oriented meditation on Shiva as inner light: contemplate the Liṅga as a blazing presence that consumes impurity, using japa of these names to pierce the ‘smoke’ of māyā and steady buddhi toward liberation.