ब्रह्मकृत-ईशानस्तवः तथा विश्वरूपदेवी-प्रकृतिरहस्योपदेशः
बलप्रमथनायैव बलिने ब्रह्मरूपिणे सर्वभूतेश्वरेशाय भूतानां दमनाय च
balapramathanāyaiva baline brahmarūpiṇe sarvabhūteśvareśāya bhūtānāṃ damanāya ca
ബലത്തിന്റെ അഹങ്കാരം തകർക്കുന്നവനു നമഃ; ബലവാനായ ബ്രഹ്മരൂപിണിക്കു നമഃ. സർവ്വഭൂതങ്ങളുടെ ഈശ്വരേശ്വരനു നമഃ; ജീവസമൂഹങ്ങളെ (പശുക്കളെ) നിയന്ത്രിച്ച് ശാസിക്കുന്നവനു നമഃ.
Suta Goswami (narrating a stuti within the Purva-Bhaga context)
It frames Shiva as the supreme Pati—both transcendent (Brahman-formed) and immanent (Lord of all beings)—so Linga-puja is not merely for worldly power, but for purification and the restraint of ego and bondage.
Shiva is described as balin (all-powerful) yet brahmarūpin (the Absolute itself), indicating Shaiva Siddhanta’s vision of the Lord as the supreme consciousness who governs all beings while remaining beyond all limiting forms.
The key yogic principle is dama (restraint/discipline): Shiva’s ‘damanāya’ points to Pashupata-oriented self-control that subdues the tyranny of ego and stabilizes the pashu for liberation.