Adhyāya 25 — Liṅga-māhātmya (The Chapter on the Liṅga): Hari’s Śiva-Worship and the Fiery Pillar Theophany
एवं विवादे वितते मायया परमेष्ठिनः / प्रबोधार्थं परं लिङ्गं प्रादुर्भूतं शिवात्मकम्
evaṃ vivāde vitate māyayā parameṣṭhinaḥ / prabodhārthaṃ paraṃ liṅgaṃ prādurbhūtaṃ śivātmakam
Ainsi, lorsque la querelle s’étendit—par le pouvoir d’illusion (māyā) du Seigneur suprême—se manifesta le Liṅga suprême, dont l’essence même est Śiva, afin de les éveiller à la vérité.
Suta (narrator) recounting the Purāṇic episode to the sages (Naimiṣāraṇya frame)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It presents the Supreme as transcendent (para) and capable of self-manifestation, using the Liṅga as a revelatory “mark” that awakens beings from māyā into recognition of the highest reality (Śiva-tattva).
The verse emphasizes prabodha (awakening) as the spiritual aim—akin to yogic viveka (discriminative insight) that cuts through māyā; this aligns with Kurma Purana’s Shaiva-Pāśupata orientation where realization, not argument, resolves bondage.
By attributing the event to the Supreme Lord’s māyā while declaring the manifested sign as “Śiva-essenced,” it frames sectarian rivalry as delusion and points to a unified Supreme that can be spoken of through Śiva and also as the highest Lord beyond division.