Vighneshvara-Prashna and Deva-Krita Shiva-Stava
Adhyaya 104
हिरण्यरेतसे चैव नमः शर्वाय शूलिने कपालदण्डपाशासिचर्माङ्कुशधराय च
hiraṇyaretase caiva namaḥ śarvāya śūline kapāladaṇḍapāśāsicarmāṅkuśadharāya ca
ນະໂມແດ່ ຮິຣັນຍະເຣຕະ; ແລະນະໂມແດ່ ສະຣະວະ ຜູ້ຖືຕຣິສູລ. ຜູ້ຊົງຖືໄມ້ກະໂຫຼກ, ບາສະ (ບ່ວງບໍ່), ດາບ, ໜັງ, ແລະອັງກຸສ; ຂ້າພະເຈົ້າຂໍກົ້ມກາບແດ່ພຣະປະຕິອົງນັ້ນ।
Suta Goswami (narrating a Shiva-stuti within the Linga Purana discourse to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It functions as a namaskāra-mantra in Shiva-stuti: by praising Shiva’s forms and emblems, the devotee aligns the mind with Pati (the Lord) before Linga-pūjā, making worship an act of surrender rather than mere ritual.
Shiva is invoked as Hiraṇyaretas (luminous creative potency) and as Śarva (the remover/dissolver), showing Him as both source and withdrawer—transcendent Pati who governs creation and release while remaining beyond bondage.
Stotra-japa and dhyāna: contemplating the noose (pāśa) and goad (aṅkuśa) as symbols of restraint and inner governance supports Pāśupata-oriented discipline—mastery over pasha (bondage) so the pashu (soul) turns toward Pati.