ध्यानयज्ञः, संसार-विष-निरूपणम्, पाशुपतयोगः, परा-अपरा विद्या, चतुर्वस्था-विचारः (अध्यायः ८६)
एक एव हि सर्वज्ञः सर्वेशस्त्वेक एव सः एष सर्वाधिपो देवस् त्व् अन्तर्यामी महाद्युतिः
eka eva hi sarvajñaḥ sarveśastveka eva saḥ eṣa sarvādhipo devas tv antaryāmī mahādyutiḥ
Sólo Él es verdaderamente omnisciente; sólo Él es el Señor de todo. Este Deva de gran resplandor es el soberano de cuanto existe: el Antaryāmin, el Regidor interior que mora en todos los seres; el Pati supremo que gobierna a todos los paśus, permaneciendo auto-luminoso.
Suta Goswami (narrating the doctrine of Shiva’s supremacy within the Purva-Bhaga discourse)
It establishes Shiva as the one sovereign and indwelling Antaryāmin; Linga worship is thus not mere external ritual but reverence to the all-pervading Pati who abides within the worshipper and within the Linga as the sign of the formless Supreme.
Shiva-tattva is presented as non-dual sovereignty: omniscient (sarvajña), lord of all (sarveśa), ruler over all domains (sarvādhipa), and the inner controller (antaryāmī), whose radiance (mahādyuti) is self-existent and not dependent on created things.
The verse points to Antaryāmin-dhyāna central to Pāśupata-oriented practice—meditating on Shiva as the inner ruler who loosens pasha (bondage) of the pashu (soul) through knowledge of Pati, which then informs Linga-pūjā as inward worship.