Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma
परस्परनिमित्तेन कोपेनाकस्मिकेन तु स साधयित्वा वृषलान् प्रायशस् तान् अधार्मिकान्
parasparanimittena kopenākasmikena tu sa sādhayitvā vṛṣalān prāyaśas tān adhārmikān
Охваченный внезапным, непредвиденным гневом, возникшим из взаимного раздражения, он снова и снова усмирял тех низких и неправедных людей, чуждых дхарме.
Suta Goswami
It frames Shiva as the protector (Pati) who restrains adharma; Linga worship aligns the pashu (soul) with that protective, dharma-establishing power.
Shiva-tattva is shown as sovereign mastery: even when wrath arises in the narrative, it functions as niyamanā (restraint) to subdue forces that bind beings in pasha (disorder and unrighteousness).
A key Pashupata takeaway is self-restraint: transforming reactive krodha into disciplined control—subduing inner “adharmic” impulses through Shiva-oriented sadhana and worship.