प्रसाद-ज्ञान-योग-मोक्षक्रमः तथा व्यास-रुद्रावतार-मन्वन्तर-परम्परा
वैवस्वतान्तरे कल्पे वाराहे ये च तान् पुनः अवतारान् प्रवक्ष्यामि तथा सर्वान्तरेषु वै
vaivasvatāntare kalpe vārāhe ye ca tān punaḥ avatārān pravakṣyāmi tathā sarvāntareṣu vai
En el Manvantara de Vaivasvata, dentro del Kalpa de Varāha, expondré de nuevo esas manifestaciones (avatāras); y del mismo modo, en verdad, (las describiré) en todos los demás Manvantaras.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya)
It frames Shiva’s manifestations as recurring across cosmic cycles (Kalpas and Manvantaras), grounding Linga worship as devotion to the timeless Pati who appears repeatedly to restore dharma and guide bound souls (pashus).
Shiva-tattva is implied as trans-cosmic and cyclical: the same Lord, beyond time, is capable of expressing avatāras within time for the governance of creation and the liberation-oriented instruction of beings.
No specific ritual is prescribed in this line; it introduces an avatāra-catalogue that typically supports Pāśupata orientation—remembering Shiva as Pati across ages, strengthening bhakti and yogic resolve toward release from pāśa (bondage).