देवैर्विष्णोः शरणागमनम्—शिवलिङ्गस्थापनं, शिवसहस्रनामस्तवः, सुदर्शनचक्रप्रदानं च
यद्रूपं भवता दृष्टं सर्वलोकभयंकरम् हिताय तव यत्नेन तव भावाय सुव्रत
yadrūpaṃ bhavatā dṛṣṭaṃ sarvalokabhayaṃkaram hitāya tava yatnena tava bhāvāya suvrata
汝が見たその姿――一切の世界を震え上がらせるもの――は、汝の利益のため、また汝の内なる心のありようにかなうよう、意をもって努力し示現したのだ、善き誓いを保つ者よ。
Suta (narrating an internal dialogue where a divine teacher explains Shiva’s manifestation)
It frames even Shiva’s terrifying manifestation as an act of anugraha (grace) meant to mature the devotee’s bhava; Linga worship trains the pashu (soul) to approach Pati (Shiva) beyond fear and appearances.
Shiva-tattva is portrayed as sovereign and intentional: He assumes forms that may appear fearsome in the worlds, yet His purpose is protective and liberating—guiding the bound soul (pashu) away from pasha (bondage) toward right orientation (bhava).
The implied practice is bhava-śuddhi through devotion and contemplation—receiving even awe and fear as a means of inner transformation, a key mood aligned with Pashupata discipline and steadfast vrata (observance).