क्षुपदधीचिसंवादः — शिलादतपः, वरसीमा, मेघवाहनकल्पे त्रिदेवसमागमः
भवन्तमवहद्विष्णुर् देवदेवं जगद्गुरुम् नारायणादपि विभो भक्तो ऽहं तव शङ्कर
bhavantamavahadviṣṇur devadevaṃ jagadgurum nārāyaṇādapi vibho bhakto 'haṃ tava śaṅkara
Viṣṇu Te exalta—Deus dos deuses, Guru do universo. Ó Senhor que tudo permeia, ó Śaṅkara, eu sou Teu devoto—para além até (da minha identidade como) Nārāyaṇa.
Vishnu (within Suta’s narration to the sages of Naimisharanya)
By declaring Shiva as Devadeva and Jagadguru, the verse establishes Shiva as the supreme Pati worthy of Linga-upasana, making worship an act of surrender to the cosmic Guru rather than mere ritual.
Shiva is presented as Vibhu (all-pervading) and Jagadguru (the inner teacher), indicating transcendence over deity-identities and affirming Shaiva Siddhanta’s view of Shiva as the supreme Lord (Pati) who guides and liberates the pashu.
The key practice is bhakti as śaraṇāgati (devotional surrender) to Shiva—the foundational attitude that matures into Pashupata-oriented discipline: turning the pashu away from pasha through devotion to Pati.