Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma
परस्परनिमित्तेन कोपेनाकस्मिकेन तु स साधयित्वा वृषलान् प्रायशस् तान् अधार्मिकान्
parasparanimittena kopenākasmikena tu sa sādhayitvā vṛṣalān prāyaśas tān adhārmikān
Saisi d’une colère soudaine et imprévue, née d’une provocation réciproque, il dompta, maintes fois, ces hommes vils et impies, ennemis du dharma.
Suta Goswami
It frames Shiva as the protector (Pati) who restrains adharma; Linga worship aligns the pashu (soul) with that protective, dharma-establishing power.
Shiva-tattva is shown as sovereign mastery: even when wrath arises in the narrative, it functions as niyamanā (restraint) to subdue forces that bind beings in pasha (disorder and unrighteousness).
A key Pashupata takeaway is self-restraint: transforming reactive krodha into disciplined control—subduing inner “adharmic” impulses through Shiva-oriented sadhana and worship.