ध्यानयज्ञः, संसार-विष-निरूपणम्, पाशुपतयोगः, परा-अपरा विद्या, चतुर्वस्था-विचारः (अध्यायः ८६)
क्रोधाद्या नाशमायान्ति धर्माधर्मौ च वै द्विजाः तत्क्षयाच्च शरीरेण न पुनः सम्प्रयुज्यते
krodhādyā nāśamāyānti dharmādharmau ca vai dvijāḥ tatkṣayācca śarīreṇa na punaḥ samprayujyate
ああ二度生まれの者たちよ、怒り等は滅びに至り、ダルマとアダルマもまた滅びに至る。それらが尽きるとき、ジーヴァは再び身と結びつかない。束縛は断たれ、主(パティ)に属する自在の解放に安らう。
Suta Goswami (narrating Purāṇic teaching to the sages of Naimiṣāraṇya)
It frames Linga-oriented Shaiva practice as a means to dissolve krodha and related impurities and to transcend both puṇya (dharma) and pāpa (adharma), culminating in non-return to embodiment—mokṣa under Shiva as Pati.
By implying liberation as freedom from re-embodiment when bonds are exhausted, it points to Shiva-tattva as Pati—the sovereign liberator who ends pasha (bondage) and grants the pashu (soul) release from karmic conjunction with the body.
It emphasizes Pāśupata-style inner discipline: conquest of anger and afflictive drives, and the ripening/exhaustion of karmic merit and demerit through Shiva-bhakti, japa, and contemplative detachment—so rebirth does not recur.