अध्याय ९६: शरभ-प्रादुर्भावः, नृसिंह-दर्पशमनम्, विष्णोः शिवस्तुतिः, फलश्रुति
द्वे तनू तव रुद्रस्य वेदज्ञा ब्राह्मणा विदुः घोराप्यन्या शिवाप्यन्या ते प्रत्येकमनेकधा
dve tanū tava rudrasya vedajñā brāhmaṇā viduḥ ghorāpyanyā śivāpyanyā te pratyekamanekadhā
Los brāhmaṇas conocedores del Veda saben que Tú, oh Rudra, tienes dos encarnaciones: una es Ghōra, el poder feroz que destruye las ataduras; la otra es Śiva, el poder auspicioso que concede gracia. Y cada una de ellas se manifiesta de múltiples maneras, según su propia naturaleza.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Linga Purana to the sages; verse framed as Vedic testimony about Rudra)
It clarifies that the one Lord (Pati) is approached through both fierce (Ghōra) and auspicious (Śiva) dimensions—so Linga-pūjā can include protection and removal of Pāśa (bondage) as well as the granting of grace (anugraha).
Śiva-tattva is non-dual in essence yet twofold in expression: Ghōra represents the Lord’s transformative, bond-cutting power, while Śiva represents the Lord’s benevolent, liberating grace—both manifesting as many forms for the sake of the paśus (souls).
It supports a Pāśupata-oriented view of practice: worship and discipline aim at loosening Pāśa through Rudra’s Ghōra power and attaining mokṣa through Śiva’s anugraha, often integrated in mantra-japa and Linga-pūjā.