Vighneshvara-Prashna and Deva-Krita Shiva-Stava
Adhyaya 104
टादिपादाय रुद्राय तादिपादाय ते नमः पादिमेण्ढ्राय यद्यङ्गधातुसप्तकधारिणे
ṭādipādāya rudrāya tādipādāya te namaḥ pādimeṇḍhrāya yadyaṅgadhātusaptakadhāriṇe
ட-ஆதி பாதத் தத்துவ ரூபமான ருத்ரனே, உமக்கு வணக்கம்; த-ஆதி பாத-ஆதார ரூபனே, உமக்கு வணக்கம். பாத-ஆதாரத்தில் நிலைத்து, உடலின் அங்கங்களும் சப்த தாதுக்களும் தாங்குபவனே, உமக்கு நமஸ்காரம்.
Suta Goswami (narrating a Rudra-stuti within the Linga Purana’s praise sequence)
It frames Shiva as the fundamental support (adhāra) of embodied life; in Linga worship, the devotee honors the Linga as that very ground of being—Pati—upon whom the pashu depends for release from pāśa.
Shiva-tattva is presented as both transcendent and immanent: transcendent as the primal foundation beyond all, and immanent as the sustainer within the body—bearing and governing the sapta-dhātu and the functioning of embodied existence.
The practice emphasized is stuti with namaskāra (devotional recitation and prostration), aligning the practitioner to Pashupati; in Pāśupata-oriented contemplation, it supports inner renunciation by recognizing the body’s constituents as upheld by Shiva, not as the Self.