अविमुक्तक्षेत्रमाहात्म्य — काशी-वाराणसी में मोक्ष, लिङ्ग-तीर्थ-मानचित्र, और उपासना-विधि
न पुनर्दुर्गतिं याति दृष्ट्वैनं व्याघ्रमीश्वरम् उत्पलो विदलश्चैव यौ दैत्यौ ब्रह्मणा पुरा
na punardurgatiṃ yāti dṛṣṭvainaṃ vyāghramīśvaram utpalo vidalaścaiva yau daityau brahmaṇā purā
Ao contemplar este Senhor como Vyāghra-Īśvara (Śiva na forma de tigre), não se cai novamente em um destino funesto. Outrora, como declarou Brahmā, até mesmo os dois Daityas—Utpala e Vidala—foram libertos de tal queda por essa visão.
Suta Goswami (narrating the mahatmya; citing Brahma’s earlier statement)
It teaches that Shiva’s darshana itself is a liberating grace (anugraha): by beholding the Lord (here as Vyāghra-Īśvara), the worshipper-pashu is protected from durgati, strengthening faith that Linga-centered devotion culminates in upliftment and release from lower rebirths.
Shiva is Pati—the sovereign Lord whose mere presence and vision can sever pasha (bondage). Even beings marked as daityas are not excluded from his salvific power, showing Shiva-tattva as universally gracious and transformative.
The key practice is darshana-bhakti—seeking the Lord’s vision with reverence. In Shaiva terms, it aligns with Pāśupata orientation: turning the pashu toward Pati through focused devotion, which becomes the doorway to purification and freedom from durgati.