Varaha-Pradurbhava Context: Prahlada’s Bhakti, Narasimha’s Ugra-Form, and Shiva’s Sharabha Intervention
एवमुक्तास्तदा तेन दैत्येन सुदुरात्मना निजघ्नुर्देवदेवस्य भृत्यं प्रह्रादमव्ययम्
evamuktāstadā tena daityena sudurātmanā nijaghnurdevadevasya bhṛtyaṃ prahrādamavyayam
かくして、あの邪悪な心のダイティヤに命じられ、彼らは不滅なる「神々の神」の従者プラフラーダに襲いかかった。されど彼は、至上の主(パティ)—シヴァ—への帰依において揺らぐことがなかった。
Suta Goswami (narrating)
It frames the devotee (bhṛtya) as one who remains ‘avyaya’—spiritually unbroken—through exclusive refuge in the Deva of devas, a core attitude behind Linga-upāsanā: steadfast surrender to Pati beyond fear and harm.
By calling Shiva ‘Deva-deva’, it points to Shiva-tattva as the supreme Pati—transcendent Lord over all devas—whose bond with the pashu (individual soul) is not destroyed even when the body is attacked.
The verse highlights unwavering bhakti and inner steadiness (dhairya) as a practical limb of Pāśupata orientation—maintaining one-pointed allegiance to Pati amid opposition—rather than an external rite.