Adhyaya 17: लिङ्गोद्भव—ब्रह्मविष्ण्वहङ्कार-शमनं, ओंकार-प्रादुर्भावः, मन्त्र-तत्त्वं च
तत्तद्विद्धि चतुर्वक्त्र सर्वं मन्मयमित्यथ मया सृष्टं पुराव्यक्तं चतुर्विंशतिकं स्वयम्
tattadviddhi caturvaktra sarvaṃ manmayamityatha mayā sṛṣṭaṃ purāvyaktaṃ caturviṃśatikaṃ svayam
知れ、四面のブラフマーよ――この一切はただ我によって遍満されている。太初に我みずから未顕(アヴィヤクタ)を生じ、そこから二十四の原理が顕現した。
Shiva (Pati) instructing Brahma within Suta’s narration
It establishes that all manifested reality arises from the Lord and is pervaded by Him; Linga worship is therefore worship of the very ground of both the unmanifest (avyakta) and the manifest tattvas.
Shiva is presented as Pati—transcendent yet immanent—who pervades all (mat-maya) while also initiating manifestation from avyakta into the twenty-four principles, remaining distinct from the bonds (pāśa) that limit the pashu (soul).
A tattva-viveka foundation for Pāśupata Yoga is implied: discern the twenty-four principles as pāśa (objective field) and turn the pashu’s awareness toward Pati, the all-pervading Lord, as the basis for liberation-oriented worship and meditation.