Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma
शुक्लदन्ताजिनाक्षाश् च मुण्डाः काषायवाससः शूद्रा धर्मं चरिष्यन्ति युगान्ते समुपस्थिते
śukladantājinākṣāś ca muṇḍāḥ kāṣāyavāsasaḥ śūdrā dharmaṃ cariṣyanti yugānte samupasthite
Quand la fin de l’âge s’approchera, même les Śūdra prendront les marques des ascètes—dents blanches, peaux de daim et chapelets, tête rasée et robe safran—et pratiqueront ce qu’on appelle « dharma ».
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It warns that external signs of religiosity can proliferate near yugānta; for Linga-worship, the implication is that true devotion to Pati (Śiva) is measured by inner purity and right practice, not merely by ascetic costume.
Indirectly: Śiva as Pati is not reached by outward marks alone. Shiva-tattva is realized when the pashu (soul) loosens pasha (bondage) through genuine discipline, devotion, and knowledge rather than mere appearance.
It highlights ascetic identifiers (muṇḍa, kāṣāya, ajina, akṣa-mālā) and implies the Shaiva critique: such externals must be joined to authentic sādhanā—especially inner restraint and Pāśupata-oriented transformation—to be meaningful.