Varaha-Pradurbhava Context: Prahlada’s Bhakti, Narasimha’s Ugra-Form, and Shiva’s Sharabha Intervention
स्तुवन्तं प्राह देवारिः प्रदहन्निव पापधीः न मां जानासि दुर्बुद्धे सर्वदैत्यामरेश्वरम्
stuvantaṃ prāha devāriḥ pradahanniva pāpadhīḥ na māṃ jānāsi durbuddhe sarvadaityāmareśvaram
Enquanto o louvavam, o inimigo dos deuses falou — sua fúria de mente pecaminosa parecia abrasá-los: “Ó tolo de mau juízo! Tu não me conheces como o soberano de todos os Daitya e até dos Amara (deuses)!”
Devāri (a Daitya leader opposing the Devas; internal dialogue within Sūta’s narration)
It contrasts daityic ego—claiming lordship over gods and demons—with the Shaiva view that true Īśvaratva belongs to Pati (Śiva); Linga-worship is a discipline to dissolve such pride (ahaṅkāra), a key pasha.
By negative implication: a finite being boasting of supremacy is marked by pāpadhī and burning rage, whereas Shiva-tattva is the transcendent Pati—free from pasha, the real Lord beyond daitya–deva dualities.
A practical takeaway aligned with Pāśupata discipline is restraint of krodha (wrath) and ahaṅkāra; in puja, this is supported by japa and bhakti that re-centers the pashu on Pati rather than power-claims.