Adhyaya 87 — Saṃsāra-viṣa-kathana: Ājñā-śakti, Māyā-bandha, and Mokṣa by Prasāda
द्विधासौ रूपमास्थाय स्थित एव न संशयः यदा विद्वानसंगः स्याद् आज्ञया परमेष्ठिनः
dvidhāsau rūpamāsthāya sthita eva na saṃśayaḥ yadā vidvānasaṃgaḥ syād ājñayā parameṣṭhinaḥ
Baginda bersemayam dengan mengambil rupa dua sisi—tiada syak—tatkala orang bijaksana menjadi tidak terikat, menurut titah Parameṣṭhin, Tuhan Yang Maha Tinggi.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Purana; teaching framed as Shaiva doctrine)
It links Linga-centered Shaiva practice to inner transformation: steadfastness in the Lord is confirmed when the practitioner (pashu) becomes asaṅga (detached) under divine injunction, making worship culminate in jñāna-vairāgya rather than mere ritual.
Shiva-tattva is implied as the supreme ordainer (Parameṣṭhin) whose ājñā governs realization; the Lord can be approached as ‘twofold’—commonly read as transcendent/manifest or Pati/power—while remaining firmly established beyond doubt.
Pāśupata-oriented yoga of asaṅga (non-attachment) is emphasized: cultivating dispassion and steadiness so the mind abides in the Lord, which is the inner discipline that completes external Linga-pūjā.