एकार्णव-सृष्टिक्रमः, ब्रह्म-विष्णु-परस्परप्रवेशः, शिवस्य आगमनं च
एष बीजी भवान्बीजम् अहं योनिः सनातनः स एवमुक्तो विश्वात्मा ब्रह्मा विष्णुमपृच्छत
eṣa bījī bhavānbījam ahaṃ yoniḥ sanātanaḥ sa evamukto viśvātmā brahmā viṣṇumapṛcchata
“तो बीजी आहे; तू बीज आहेस; मी सनातन योनी आहे.” असे म्हटल्यावर विश्वात्मा ब्रह्म्याने विष्णूला पुन्हा विचारले।
Suta (narrating an internal dialogue in which Brahma speaks and then questions Vishnu)
It frames creation through the bīja–yoni symbolism that underlies Liṅga theology: the transcendent Pati as the ultimate seed-bearer, with manifest powers functioning as seed and womb—supporting Liṅga worship as reverence for the causal source beyond merely worldly generation.
By implication, Shiva-tattva is the bījī—the supreme possessor of generative potency—beyond Brahmā and Viṣṇu’s roles. In Shaiva Siddhanta terms, Pati remains the independent cause, while other principles operate dependently within his śakti.
A contemplative (dhyāna) takeaway: meditate on the causal triad—seed-bearer, seed, and womb—then transcend them by fixing awareness on Pati (the supreme source), a core orientation aligned with Pāśupata-style inward inquiry rather than an external rite alone.