Adhyaya 8: Yogasthanas, Ashtanga Yoga, Pranayama-Siddhi, and Shiva-Dhyana leading to Samadhi
अहिंसाप्येवमेवैषा द्विजगुर्वग्निपूजने विधिना यादृशी हिंसा सा त्वहिंसा इति स्मृता
ahiṃsāpyevamevaiṣā dvijagurvagnipūjane vidhinā yādṛśī hiṃsā sā tvahiṃsā iti smṛtā
Demikian pula inilah yang disebut ahiṃsā: dalam pemujaan kepada dvija, Guru, dan Api Suci, ‘kekerasan’ apa pun yang dilakukan menurut tata-ritus, diingat sebagai ahiṃsā—karena dibatasi oleh dharma dan diarahkan kepada Pati, Śiva.
Suta Goswami
It frames Shaiva worship as dharma-governed: actions done in prescribed puja—especially honoring Guru and Agni—are purificatory and not counted as adharmic himsa when they serve sacred duty and inner restraint.
By implying that dharmic action is measured by intention and injunction, it points to Pati (Shiva) as the supreme regulator of dharma: the soul (pashu) is purified when acts are aligned to scriptural order rather than egoic impulse.
Puja-vidhi centered on dvija, guru, and Agni—ritual discipline that supports Pashupata-style restraint (niyama) and the reduction of pasha (bondage) through regulated conduct.