वंशानुवर्णनम् — सात्वतवंशः, स्यमन्तक-प्रसङ्गः, कृष्णावतारः, शिवप्रसादः (पाशुपतयोगः)
जाते रामे ऽथ निहते षड्गर्भे चातिदक्षिणे वसुदेवो हरिं धीमान् देवक्यामुदपादयत्
jāte rāme 'tha nihate ṣaḍgarbhe cātidakṣiṇe vasudevo hariṃ dhīmān devakyāmudapādayat
Après la naissance de Rāma, et après que les six embryons eurent été mis à mort — à l’instant le plus faste — le sage Vasudeva fit naître Hari de Devakī. Dans la vision purānique, de telles descentes adviennent par l’ordonnance de Pati (le Seigneur suprême), afin de relâcher le pasha (l’entrave) qui lie le pashu (l’âme individuelle).
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
Though the verse names Hari’s birth, it situates avatāra-history under the Purāṇic cosmic order governed by Pati; in Linga-worship this reinforces that liberation and dharma-restoration ultimately proceed by the Lord’s (Shiva’s) sovereign ordinance, to cut pasha and uplift the pashu.
Shiva-tattva is implied as the supreme governance behind auspicious timing and cosmic events: births and destructions occur in a divinely ordered sequence aimed at restoring dharma and easing bondage, reflecting Pati’s transcendent oversight even when other deities are named.
No explicit puja-vidhi is stated; the takeaway is the Shaiva Siddhanta frame that yogic and ritual disciplines (including Pāśupata orientation) aim at the same goal mirrored here—removal of pasha and protection of dharma through alignment with Pati’s will.