वासिष्ठकथनम् (आदित्य–सोमवंशवर्णनम् तथा रुद्रसहस्रनाम-प्रशंसा)
सर्वात्मा सर्वविख्यातः सर्वः सर्वकरो भवः जटी दण्डी शिखण्डी च सर्वगः सर्वभावनः
sarvātmā sarvavikhyātaḥ sarvaḥ sarvakaro bhavaḥ jaṭī daṇḍī śikhaṇḍī ca sarvagaḥ sarvabhāvanaḥ
Él es el Ser en todos los seres, célebre por doquier; Él es el Todo. Como Bhava, es el hacedor de todo. Es el asceta de cabellera enmarañada, el renunciante que porta el báculo y el adornado con la insignia de la cresta. Omnipresente, hace manifestarse y madurar todos los estados de la existencia.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva’s names as taught in the Linga Purana tradition)
It frames Shiva as the all-pervading Pati (Lord) who is present within all as the inner Self; thus Linga worship is not merely external ritual but recognition of the same Shiva pervading the worshipper (pashu), the worship (kriya), and the worshipped (Linga).
Shiva is portrayed as sarvātmā (immanent Self) and sarvagaḥ (transcendent-pervading), while also being sarvakaraḥ (the efficient cause of all becoming). In Shaiva Siddhanta terms, He is Pati—independent, all-knowing, and the sovereign who governs pasha and liberates the pashu.
The names jati and daṇḍī point to the ascetic-yogic ideal central to Pashupata discipline: restraint, inner purification, and meditative identification with Shiva as the indwelling Self, which complements Linga-puja through mantra, dhyana, and niyama.