शरभप्रादुर्भावो नाम षण्णवतितमोऽध्यायः (जलन्धरविमर्दनम्)
बालभावे च भगवान् तपसैव विनिर्जितः ब्रह्मा बली यौवने वै मुनयः सुरपुङ्गवैः
bālabhāve ca bhagavān tapasaiva vinirjitaḥ brahmā balī yauvane vai munayaḥ surapuṅgavaiḥ
ബാല്യത്തിലുപോലും ഭഗവാൻ തപസ്സിനാൽ മാത്രമേ വശനാകുമായിരുന്നുള്ളൂ; അല്ലെങ്കിൽ അജേയൻ. യൗവനത്തിൽ ബലവാനായ ബ്രഹ്മാവും ജയിക്കപ്പെട്ടു; അതുപോലെ ദേവശ്രേഷ്ഠന്മാരോടുകൂടി മുനിമാരും വശപ്പെട്ടു।
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya; contextual attribution)
It establishes Shiva (Pati) as supreme over Brahmā, the devas, and sages—supporting Linga worship as devotion to the highest Lord whose presence is accessed through tapas and disciplined practice.
Shiva-tattva is portrayed as unconquerable and sovereign; even exalted cosmic authorities (Brahmā) and spiritual elites (munis) are ‘overcome’ by his ascetic potency, indicating transcendence beyond created hierarchy.
Tapas (austerity) is highlighted as the operative yogic force—aligned with Pāśupata discipline—by which pasha (bondage) is weakened and the pashu (soul) is oriented toward Pati (Shiva).