Adhyaya 87 — Saṃsāra-viṣa-kathana: Ājñā-śakti, Māyā-bandha, and Mokṣa by Prasāda
पुरा ममाज्ञा मद्वक्त्रात् समुत्पन्ना सनातनी पञ्चवक्त्रा महाभागा जगतामभयप्रदा
purā mamājñā madvaktrāt samutpannā sanātanī pañcavaktrā mahābhāgā jagatāmabhayapradā
Outrora, o Meu Comando eterno surgiu da Minha própria boca—auspicioso e de cinco faces—concedendo destemor a todos os mundos.
Shiva (within Suta’s narration to the sages)
It frames Shiva’s ājñā (divine ordinance) as a protective, world-sustaining power—implying that Linga-pūjā aligns the devotee (pashu) with the Lord (Pati) who grants abhayam (fearlessness).
Shiva-tattva is shown as sanātana (eternal) and sovereign: his very utterance becomes a manifest power that governs and protects the cosmos, expressing Pati’s rulership over pashus and pasha.
The key takeaway is abhayaprāpti (attainment of fearlessness) through Shiva’s grace—classically sought via mantra-japa, Linga-arcana, and Pāśupata discipline that turns the pashu toward the Pati.