Adhyaya 79 — Bhakti-Mahima and Linga-Archana-Vidhi
Condensed Ritual Sequence
अर्चितं परमेशानं भवं शर्वमुमापतिम् सकृत्प्रसंगाद्वा दृष्ट्वा सर्वपापैः प्रमुच्यते
arcitaṃ parameśānaṃ bhavaṃ śarvamumāpatim sakṛtprasaṃgādvā dṛṣṭvā sarvapāpaiḥ pramucyate
Con sólo contemplar, aunque sea una vez—sea con intención o por mero encuentro fortuito—al Supremo Parameśāna, el Pati adorado: Bhava, Śarva, consorte de Umā, uno queda liberado de todos los pecados y de las impurezas que atan al alma como un pāśa.
Suta Goswami
It teaches that Shiva’s worship and even a single darśana of the worshipped Lord grants powerful purification—pāpa is cut off like pasha (bondage), making the pashu fit for higher sādhana such as linga-pūjā and Pāśupata discipline.
Shiva is presented as Parameśāna (the Supreme Pati) who liberates; his names Bhava and Śarva indicate both governance of worldly becoming and the destruction of afflictive bonds, while Umāpati signals inseparable Shiva–Śakti unity behind grace (anugraha).
Darśana and arcana (worship) are highlighted: approaching the linga or Shiva’s form with reverence—sometimes even by accidental contact—initiates inner purification, a foundational step for Pāśupata Yoga and disciplined Shiva-pūjā.