Adhyaya 70: आदिसर्गः—महत्-अहङ्कार-तन्मात्रा-भूतसृष्टिः, ब्रह्माण्डावरणम्, प्रजासर्गः, त्रिमूर्ति-शैवाधिष्ठानम्
विराजेतामुभौ लोके तेजः संक्षिप्य धिष्ठितौ तावुभौ योगकर्माणाव् आरोप्यात्मानम् आत्मनि
virājetāmubhau loke tejaḥ saṃkṣipya dhiṣṭhitau tāvubhau yogakarmāṇāv āropyātmānam ātmani
ในทั้งสองโลกท่านทั้งคู่ส่องประกาย โดยรวบรวมรัศมีไว้ภายในและตั้งมั่นอย่างแน่วแน่. แล้วปฏิบัติโยคกรรม ท่านทั้งสองวางอาตมันไว้ในอาตมัน—ดำดิ่งสู่สมาธิอันหันเข้าภายใน।
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames Linga-centered Shaiva practice as inwardization: withdrawing tejas and stabilizing awareness, so worship culminates in yogic absorption where the pashu (soul) turns toward Pati (Shiva) rather than remaining outward-bound.
Shiva-tattva is implied as the stable ground in which tejas is gathered and consciousness becomes established; the movement of “placing the self in the Self” points to the Shaiva aim of dissolving pasha-bound egoity into the higher Self oriented to Pati.
A Pashupata-leaning yogic discipline is indicated: pratyāhāra-like withdrawal of tejas, steadiness (dhiṣṭhiti), and samādhi where the self-sense is reposed in the inner Self—often paired in Shaiva practice with japa and dhyāna on the Linga.