क्षुपस्य विष्णुदर्शनं, वैष्णवस्तोत्रं, दधीचविवादः, स्थानेश्वरतीर्थमाहात्म्यं
भविता तस्य शापेन दक्षयज्ञे सुरैः समम् विनाशो मम राजेन्द्र पुनरुत्थानमेव च
bhavitā tasya śāpena dakṣayajñe suraiḥ samam vināśo mama rājendra punarutthānameva ca
Ó rei, pelo poder da sua maldição, no sacrifício de Dakṣa haverá a minha destruição juntamente com os Devas—e, contudo, haverá também a minha restauração novamente. Assim Pati (Śiva), que ata e liberta, revela pela sua vontade tanto a dissolução quanto o reerguer-se.
Suta (narrating a royal-directed episode within the Daksha-yajna narrative)
It frames Śiva as the sovereign Pati whose power can nullify ritual performed without devotion; true Linga-oriented worship requires humility and recognition of Śiva’s supremacy beyond mere yajña-formalism.
Śiva-tattva is shown as simultaneously the force of vināśa (dissolution) and punarutthāna (restoration), indicating his lordship over saṃhāra and anugraha—binding and releasing pashus from pāśa.
The takeaway is corrective: Vedic ritual (yajña) without Śiva-bhakti becomes spiritually sterile; the implied practice is devotion-centered Śiva-pūjā aligned with Pāśupata discipline—purifying ego and submitting action to Pati.