स्वेच्छाविग्रहसंभव-प्रतिष्ठाफलवर्णनम् (विविधशिवमूर्तिप्रतिष्ठा, लोक-फल, शिवसायुज्य)
भुक्त्वा तु विपुलांस्तत्र भोगान् युगशतं नरः ज्ञानयोगं समासाद्य तत्रैव च विमुच्यते
bhuktvā tu vipulāṃstatra bhogān yugaśataṃ naraḥ jñānayogaṃ samāsādya tatraiva ca vimucyate
Tras gozar allí de abundantes deleites durante cien yugas, el hombre alcanza el Yoga del conocimiento liberador; y en ese mismo estado es liberado: el pāśa queda cortado por la gracia de Pati (Śiva).
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya)
It frames bhoga as finite and mokṣa as the higher fruit: after karmic enjoyments are exhausted, the paśu turns to jñāna-yoga, culminating in release—an implicit push toward Śiva-centered sādhana (liṅga-bhakti and yoga) rather than mere heavenly reward.
Śiva-tattva is implied as Pati—the liberating Lord—because liberation (vimukti) is achieved when the soul attains jñāna-yoga that severs pasha; in Śaiva Siddhānta terms, the Lord is the ultimate remover of bondage and revealer of knowledge.
Jñāna-yoga is highlighted: the inward discipline where knowledge arises after the limits of bhoga are understood; in a Pāśupata reading, this matures into Śiva-focused yoga leading to direct release (vimukti).