अन्धकानुग्रहः—शूलारोपणं, रुद्रस्मरण-फलम्, तथा गाणपत्य-प्रदानम् (अध्याय 93)
सगणं शिवमीशानम् अस्तुवत्पुण्यगौरवात् प्रार्थितस्तेन भगवान् परमार्तिहरो हरः
sagaṇaṃ śivamīśānam astuvatpuṇyagauravāt prārthitastena bhagavān paramārtiharo haraḥ
Junto con sus gaṇas, él alabó a Śiva, el Señor Īśāna; y por el peso y la dignidad de ese mérito, Bhagavān Hara—el que disipa la más honda aflicción del alma—fue implorado por él y se mostró benévolamente atento.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It presents stuti (devotional praise) and prārthanā (supplication) as direct means to invoke Śiva’s anugraha; in Linga-oriented devotion, such praise is treated as a purifying act that ripens puṇya and draws the Lord’s grace.
Śiva is identified as Īśāna and Hara—Pati, the sovereign Lord—whose essential function is paramārti-haraṇa: removing the deepest suffering rooted in pāśa (bondage) and restoring the pashu (soul) toward freedom through grace.
The verse highlights stotra/stuti as a core upacāra of Śiva-pūjā and as a Pāśupata-oriented discipline of devotion, where concentrated praise and heartfelt petition become instruments for inner purification and receiving anugraha.