अध्याय ९६: शरभ-प्रादुर्भावः, नृसिंह-दर्पशमनम्, विष्णोः शिवस्तुतिः, फलश्रुति
नमो नृसिंहसंहर्त्रे कामकालपुरारये महापाशौघसंहर्त्रे विष्णुमायान्तकारिणे
namo nṛsiṃhasaṃhartre kāmakālapurāraye mahāpāśaughasaṃhartre viṣṇumāyāntakāriṇe
Hommage au Seigneur qui dompte même la force de Narasiṁha; qui est l’ennemi des cités de Kāma et de Kāla; qui détruit l’immense multitude des liens (pāśa) enchaînant le paśu (l’âme); et qui met fin même au pouvoir d’illusion (māyā) associé à Viṣṇu.
Suta Goswami
It frames Linga-worship as refuge in Pati (Shiva) who breaks pāśa—bondage from desire, time/death, and delusion—making the devotee’s approach to the Linga a liberation-oriented act, not merely a worldly petition.
Shiva is presented as Pati, the sovereign who can subdue even divine forces, destroy the inner ‘cities’ of Kāma and Kāla, and dissolve māyā—thereby revealing the pashu’s innate capacity for release through His grace.
The verse primarily functions as a protective stuti (mantra-like praise) used in puja and Pāśupata-oriented contemplation: remembering Shiva as pāśa-destroyer to weaken kāma (craving) and fear of kāla (death/time).