अविमुक्तक्षेत्रमाहात्म्य — काशी-वाराणसी में मोक्ष, लिङ्ग-तीर्थ-मानचित्र, और उपासना-विधि
हिरण्यगर्भ इत्येवं ततो ऽत्राहं समास्थितः दृष्ट्वैनमपि देवेशं मम लोकं व्रजेन्नरः
hiraṇyagarbha ityevaṃ tato 'trāhaṃ samāsthitaḥ dṛṣṭvainamapi deveśaṃ mama lokaṃ vrajennaraḥ
ដូច្នេះ ក្នុងនាម «ហិរ៉ណ្យគರ್ಭ» ខ្ញុំបានស្ថិតនៅទីនេះ។ មនុស្សណាដែលបានឃើញព្រះអម្ចាស់នៃទេវតាទាំងឡាយនេះ នឹងទៅដល់លោករបស់ខ្ញុំ—ឈានដល់អាណាចក្រទេវភាពដោយទស្សនានោះ។
Brahma (Hiraṇyagarbha), within Suta’s narration to the sages
It emphasizes darśana (beholding) of Deva-īśa—central to liṅga-upāsanā—as spiritually efficacious: even a single true vision of the Lord is said to elevate the pashu (soul) toward a divine realm, preparing it for Shiva’s grace.
Shiva is presented as Deva-īśa, the sovereign over all gods, whose presence transcends cosmic offices like Hiraṇyagarbha; by encountering him, the soul moves beyond ordinary bondage (pāśa) toward higher states granted through divine lordship (pati-tattva).
The key practice is darśana grounded in devotion—approaching the liṅga or Shiva’s manifested form with focused awareness; in Pāśupata-oriented terms, such contemplative seeing functions as a purifier that supports ascent toward Shiva’s domain and eventual release from pāśa.