Adhyaya 75: Nishkala–Sakala Shiva, Twofold Linga, and the Supremacy of Dhyana-Yajna
परानन्दात्मकं लिङ्गं विशुद्धं शिवमक्षरम् निष्कलं सर्वगं ज्ञेयं योगिनां हृदि संस्थितम्
parānandātmakaṃ liṅgaṃ viśuddhaṃ śivamakṣaram niṣkalaṃ sarvagaṃ jñeyaṃ yogināṃ hṛdi saṃsthitam
Reconoce el Liṅga como la esencia misma de la dicha suprema: totalmente puro, Śiva en persona, la Realidad imperecedera; sin partes (más allá de toda división), omnipenetrante, y establecido en el corazón de los yoguis.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Linga’s transcendental nature within the Purva-Bhaga discourse)
It shifts Linga worship from mere external symbol to inner realization: the true Linga is Shiva’s pure, imperishable presence, to be known as all-pervading bliss and contemplated within the heart.
Shiva is presented as Akshara (unchanging), Vishuddha (absolutely pure), Nishkala (beyond parts and limiting distinctions), and Sarvaga (all-pervading)—the Pati whose reality is directly knowable to the yogin.
A yogic upasana: inward meditation on the Linga as the heart-established presence of Shiva—supporting Pashupata-style contemplation where the pashu (soul) turns inward to realize Pati beyond pasha (bondage).