Adhyaya 75: Nishkala–Sakala Shiva, Twofold Linga, and the Supremacy of Dhyana-Yajna
स स्वेच्छया शिवः साक्षाद् देव्या सार्धं स्थितः प्रभुः संतारणार्थं च शिवः सदसद्व्यक्तिवर्जितः
sa svecchayā śivaḥ sākṣād devyā sārdhaṃ sthitaḥ prabhuḥ saṃtāraṇārthaṃ ca śivaḥ sadasadvyaktivarjitaḥ
Por su propia libre voluntad, Śiva—el Señor mismo—se manifestó, permaneciendo junto a la Diosa. Y para hacer cruzar a los seres más allá de la atadura, Śiva mora más allá de las categorías de lo existente y lo no existente, y más allá de lo meramente manifiesto y no manifiesto.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames Shiva’s manifest presence (sākṣāt) with Shakti as an act of grace for saṃtāraṇa—deliverance—supporting the idea that the Linga is a worshipful, accessible form of the transcendent Pati who liberates the pashu from pasha.
Shiva is simultaneously present and yet beyond conceptual extremes—neither confined to sat/asat nor to vyakta/avyakta—indicating a supreme reality that can appear by will while remaining ontologically transcendent.
The verse points to grace-centered liberation: worship and contemplation of Shiva as Pati (often via Linga-puja with awareness of Shiva-Shakti) as the inner support for Pashupata-oriented sadhana aimed at crossing bondage.