उमामहेश्वरव्रतं—पञ्चाक्षरमन्त्रस्य माहात्म्यं, न्यासः, जपविधिः, सदाचारः, विनियोगः
परदारान्परद्रव्यं परहिंसां च सर्वदा क्वचिच्चापि न कुर्वीत वाचा च मनसा तथा
paradārānparadravyaṃ parahiṃsāṃ ca sarvadā kvaciccāpi na kurvīta vācā ca manasā tathā
No debe uno, en ningún tiempo, inclinarse hacia la esposa de otro, la riqueza ajena o el daño a los seres; ni cometer tales actos siquiera con la palabra o en la mente. Tal continencia purifica al paśu (alma ligada) y lo prepara para la devoción a Pati, el Señor Śiva.
Suta Goswami
It establishes inner and outer purity—restraint from adultery, theft, and violence in deed, speech, and thought—as the ethical ground on which Linga-pūjā becomes spiritually effective and leads the paśu toward Pati (Śiva).
By implying Śiva as Pati—the pure Lord who grants liberation—this verse teaches that approaching Śiva-tattva requires purification of the paśu from pasha-like impulses (harm, greed, lust) at the levels of body, speech, and mind.
It highlights yama-like restraints central to Pāśupata discipline—ahiṁsā, asteya, and brahmacarya/sexual restraint—extended to vāk (speech) and manas (mind), supporting steadiness in japa, dhyāna, and pūjā.