उपलेपनादिकथनम्
Vastraputa-jala, Ahimsa, and Conduct in Shiva Worship
यज्ञार्थं पशुहिंसा च क्षत्रियैर्दुष्टशासनम् विहिताविहितं नास्ति योगिनां ब्रह्मवादिनाम्
yajñārthaṃ paśuhiṃsā ca kṣatriyairduṣṭaśāsanam vihitāvihitaṃ nāsti yogināṃ brahmavādinām
यज्ञार्थं पशुहिंसा च क्षत्रियैर्दुष्टशासनं च विहितम्। योगिनां ब्रह्मवादिनां तु विहिताविहितभेदो नास्ति॥
Suta Goswami (narrating Linga Purana teachings to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames outer ritual (yajña) and social duty as conditional dharma, while pointing Linga-centered yogic realization toward Pati (Śiva) where bondage-born dualities of “allowed/forbidden” fall away in purified awareness.
By implying a Brahman-established yogin’s standpoint, it gestures to Shiva-tattva as the transcendent Pati—beyond moral dualities—while still upholding dharma for embodied pashus bound by pāśa.
It contrasts Vedic yajña-dharma and kṣatriya duty with the yogin’s higher discipline—Pāśupata-oriented inner purification and Brahman-abidance—where action is guided by jñāna rather than rule-based dualism.