प्रसाद-ज्ञान-योग-मोक्षक्रमः तथा व्यास-रुद्रावतार-मन्वन्तर-परम्परा
क्रतुः सत्यो भार्गवश् च अङ्गिराः सविता द्विजाः मृत्युः शतक्रतुर्धीमान् वसिष्ठो मुनिपुंगवः
kratuḥ satyo bhārgavaś ca aṅgirāḥ savitā dvijāḥ mṛtyuḥ śatakraturdhīmān vasiṣṭho munipuṃgavaḥ
Il est Kratu (la puissance du rite sacrificiel), Satya (la Vérité même), Bhārgava et Aṅgiras ; Il est Savitṛ (l’Impulseur de tous les êtres) et Dvija (le deux-fois-né, l’éveil intérieur). Il est Mṛtyu (la Mort qui met fin à tout), Śatakratu (le seigneur de cent sacrifices), Dhīmān (l’intelligence suprême), Vasiṣṭha, et le plus éminent parmi les sages.
Suta Goswami (reciting Shiva-Sahasranama to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames Shiva as the inner essence behind Vedic sacrifice (kratu) and truth (satya), showing that Linga-worship is not separate from yajña but its highest, inward completion—offering the pashu (individual soul) to Pati through devotion and surrender.
Shiva-tattva is presented as both immanent and transcendent: He is the energizing intelligence (dhīmān) that impels creation (savitā) and also the absolute terminus of embodied life (mṛtyu), indicating His lordship over sṛṣṭi (manifestation) and laya (dissolution) while remaining Satya.
The verse points to the yogic interiorization of yajña: making one’s intention (kratu) truthful (satya) and offering the ego-bound pashu into Shiva as the final transformer (mṛtyu), aligning with Pashupata discipline of renunciation, mantra, and single-pointed devotion to Pati.