देवैर्विष्णोः शरणागमनम्—शिवलिङ्गस्थापनं, शिवसहस्रनामस्तवः, सुदर्शनचक्रप्रदानं च
वरशीलो वरतुलो मानो मानधनो मयः ब्रह्मा विष्णुः प्रजापालो हंसो हंसगतिर्यमः
varaśīlo varatulo māno mānadhano mayaḥ brahmā viṣṇuḥ prajāpālo haṃso haṃsagatiryamaḥ
Él es de conducta excelsa y de proporción perfecta; Él es el Honor mismo y la verdadera riqueza de los honorables. Él es el Poder maravilloso que mide y manifiesta todo. Él es Brahmā y Viṣṇu, Protector de las criaturas; Él es el Haṃsa (el Ser puro y trascendente), el mismo curso del Haṃsa, y Yama: el justo ordenador que refrena y guía a todos los seres.
Suta Goswami (reciting the Shiva Sahasranama within the Linga Purana narrative)
It frames the Linga as the one Pati who performs all cosmic roles—creation, preservation, and righteous governance—so worship is directed to the single Supreme Reality behind all divine functions.
Shiva is presented as the all-inclusive Lord: He is simultaneously Brahmā and Viṣṇu (cosmic functions) and Yama (moral order), while also being Haṃsa—the pure, transcendent Self that grants the liberated state (haṃsa-gati).
The phrase “haṃsa” and “haṃsa-gati” points to Pashupata-oriented inner discipline—steady restraint (yama) and meditative ascent toward the pure Self—supported by Linga-puja as devotion to the Pati who releases the pashu from pasha.