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Shloka 106

ध्यानयज्ञः, संसार-विष-निरूपणम्, पाशुपतयोगः, परा-अपरा विद्या, चतुर्वस्था-विचारः (अध्यायः ८६)

कर्तव्यं नास्ति विप्रेन्द्रा अस्ति चेत्तत्त्वविन्न च इह लोके परे चापि कर्तव्यं नास्ति तस्य वै

kartavyaṃ nāsti viprendrā asti cettattvavinna ca iha loke pare cāpi kartavyaṃ nāsti tasya vai

ఓ విప్రేంద్రులారా, తత్త్వజ్ఞునికి ఏ విధమైన బంధనకర కర్తవ్యం మిగలదు. ఈ లోకంలోనైనా పరలోకంలోనైనా అతనికి ‘ఇది తప్పక చేయాలి’ అనే బంధం లేదు—ఇదే సత్యం.

कर्तव्यम्obligatory duty/compulsory act
कर्तव्यम्:
नास्तिis not/does not exist
नास्ति:
विप्रेन्द्राःO best among the Brahmins
विप्रेन्द्राः:
अस्तिexists
अस्ति:
चेत्if/indeed
चेत्:
तत्त्ववित्knower of tattva (truth of Pati–Pashu–Pāśa)
तत्त्ववित्:
न चand not/never
न च:
इह लोकेin this world
इह लोके:
परेin the other (world)/hereafter
परे:
चापिand also
चापि:
तस्यfor him/of that person
तस्य:
वैindeed/certainly
वै:

Suta Goswami (narrating the doctrine as part of the Linga Purana’s Shaiva teaching to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames Linga-worship as a means to Shiva-tattva realization: when the devotee truly knows Pati (Shiva) and the nature of Pashu and Pāśa, ritual obligation no longer binds—worship becomes spontaneous devotion rather than compulsory karma.

By implying that tattva-jñāna dissolves binding duties, it points to Shiva as Pati—the liberating principle beyond karmic compulsion—through whose knowledge the soul (Pashu) is freed from bonds (Pāśa) in both worldly and post-worldly states.

The verse highlights the Pashupata trajectory from karma to jñāna: disciplined worship/observance culminates in tattva-jñāna, after which obligatory rites cease to be binding and the practitioner abides in liberated awareness.