Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma
ब्रह्मणस्तदहः प्रोक्तं रात्रिश्चैतावती स्मृता अनार्जवं जडीभावो भूतानाम् आ युगक्षयात्
brahmaṇastadahaḥ proktaṃ rātriścaitāvatī smṛtā anārjavaṃ jaḍībhāvo bhūtānām ā yugakṣayāt
かくしてブラフマーの「昼」が説かれ、「夜」もまた同じ量であると記憶される。ユガの終わりに至るまで、衆生は不正と鈍い惰性の状態に沈み—覆い隠す力によりパシュ(paśu)として縛られ—時の転回を待つ。
Suta Goswami (narrating the doctrine of cosmic time to the sages of Naimisharanya)
By defining Brahmā’s day and night as measures of cosmic manifestation and dissolution, the verse frames Linga worship as devotion to Pati (Śiva) who stands beyond time-cycles and grants release to the paśu from pasha.
Though Śiva is not named here, the teaching implies a Shaiva Siddhanta view: time and cyclic decline (anārjava, jaḍībhāva) govern embodied beings, while Shiva-tattva as Pati transcends these cycles and can remove veiling and bondage.
The takeaway aligns with Pāśupata-Śaiva discipline: countering jaḍībhāva (tamas/inertia) through steady japa, dhyāna, and Linga-pūjā so the paśu is not carried helplessly to yuga’s end under pasha.