देवैर्विष्णोः शरणागमनम्—शिवलिङ्गस्थापनं, शिवसहस्रनामस्तवः, सुदर्शनचक्रप्रदानं च
मां दिव्येन च भावेन तदाप्रभृति शङ्करम् द्रक्ष्यसे च प्रसन्नेन मित्रभूतमिवात्मना
māṃ divyena ca bhāvena tadāprabhṛti śaṅkaram drakṣyase ca prasannena mitrabhūtamivātmanā
அந்த நாள்முதல் நீ தெய்வீகமான பாவத்துடன் என்னை சங்கரனாகத் தரிசிப்பாய்; அமைதியடைந்த உள்ளத்துடன் என்னை நம்பிக்கையான நண்பனைப் போல நெருக்கமாகக் காண்பாய்।
Shiva (Śaṅkara) speaking within Suta’s narration
It teaches that successful Linga-upāsanā is not only external ritual but requires divya-bhāva; when the worshipper’s inner self becomes prasanna, Shiva becomes experientially present like a close friend.
Shiva is shown as Śaṅkara, the auspicious Pati who reveals Himself through grace when the pashu’s inner condition is purified; His nearness is intimate—‘like a friend’—yet grounded in transcendence.
The key practice is bhāva-śuddhi (purifying intention and inner attitude) aligned with Pāśupata discipline—cultivating serenity (prasannatā) so darśana arises as anugraha rather than mere sensory sight.