देवादिसृष्टिकथनम् (वसिष्ठशोकः, पराशरजन्म, एकलिङ्गपूजा, रुद्रदर्शनम्)
सा पराशरमहो महामतिं देवदानवगणैश् च पूजितम् जातमात्रम् अनघं शुचिस्मिता बुध्य साश्रुनयना ललाप च
sā parāśaramaho mahāmatiṃ devadānavagaṇaiś ca pūjitam jātamātram anaghaṃ śucismitā budhya sāśrunayanā lalāpa ca
Elle—au sourire pur, l’intelligence éveillée—vit cet être magnanime et d’une sagesse suprême, issu de la lignée de Parāśara, honoré par les troupes des Devas comme des Dānavas; voyant le nouveau-né sans faute, elle se lamenta, les yeux pleins de larmes.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya, with an internal story reference)
The verse frames a birth-event as cosmically significant—so significant that even opposing hosts (Devas and Dānavas) offer reverence—hinting that true sacred power (linked to Shiva as Pati) transcends factional identity, a key lens for understanding why the Linga is worshipped as the universal sign of the Absolute.
Indirectly, it points to Shiva-tattva as that which is honored beyond dualities: when Devas and Dānavas alike worship what is “anagha” (faultless), it echoes the Siddhānta view that Pati is stainless and sovereign, and that purity and authority do not depend on worldly alignment.
No explicit rite is prescribed here; the yogic cue is inner discernment (buddhi) and the transformative sorrow (aśru) that can mature into vairāgya—an inner preparation aligned with Pāśupata discipline before formal pūjā or mantra-sādhana.