Shivamurti–Pratishtha Phala: Shivalaya-Nirmana, Kshetra-Mahatmya, Tirtha-Snana, and Mandala-Vidhi
शिवसायुज्यमाप्नोति नात्र कार्या विचारणा पुराथ सूकरः कश्चित् श्वानं दृष्ट्वा भयात्पथि
śivasāyujyamāpnoti nātra kāryā vicāraṇā purātha sūkaraḥ kaścit śvānaṃ dṛṣṭvā bhayātpathi
Alcanza el sāyujya con Śiva, la unión íntima; no hay que dudar de ello. Pues en tiempos antiguos, cierto jabalí, al ver a un perro en el camino, por miedo despertó un recuerdo orientado a Śiva y así obtuvo el fruto supremo.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Linga Purana teaching to the sages at Naimisharanya)
It emphasizes that even a single Shiva-oriented turning of consciousness can bear the fruit of Śiva-sāyujya, underscoring the Linga Purana theme that Shiva’s grace (anugraha) in Linga-bhakti surpasses ordinary calculations of merit.
Shiva is implied as Pati—the liberating Lord—whose anugraha can cut pasha (bondage) for the pashu (individual soul) even when the soul’s movement toward Him is minimal, accidental, or born from distress.
The verse highlights smaraṇa (remembrance) and one-pointed turning toward Shiva as a decisive liberating factor—aligned with Shaiva praxis where inner orientation (bhāva) and Shiva-grace complete what formal practice may lack.