शिवार्चनविधिः — देवतानां पाशुपतव्रतप्राप्तिः तथा पशुपाशविमोक्षणम् (अध्याय ८०)
पुरा पुरत्रयं दग्धुं पशुत्वं परिभाषितम् शङ्किताश् च वयं तत्र पशुत्वं प्रति सुव्रत
purā puratrayaṃ dagdhuṃ paśutvaṃ paribhāṣitam śaṅkitāś ca vayaṃ tatra paśutvaṃ prati suvrata
పూర్వం త్రిపురదాహ సందర్భమున ‘పశుత్వం’ నిర్వచింపబడెను. ఓ సువ్రతా, అక్కడ మేము కూడా ఆ పశుత్వ విషయమున శంకితులమయ్యాము.
Suta Goswami (outer narration; addressing the sages—contextually a vocative within the narrative)
It frames Tripura-dahana as a teaching moment: worship of Shiva as Pati is meaningful because it addresses paśutva—bondage of the soul—and points toward release through Shiva-centered devotion and discipline.
By connecting the Tripura episode with the definition of paśutva, it implies Shiva-tattva as Pati—the sovereign liberator whose power over destruction also signifies removal of pasha (bondage) from the paśu (individual soul).
The verse primarily highlights doctrinal contemplation (viveka) on paśutva; in Pashupata-oriented practice this becomes the basis for turning to Shiva-upāsanā—discipline, mantra, and worship aimed at cutting the bonds.