Varaha-Pradurbhava Context: Prahlada’s Bhakti, Narasimha’s Ugra-Form, and Shiva’s Sharabha Intervention
तत्र तत्प्रतिकृतं तदा सुरैर् दैत्यराजतनयं द्विजोत्तमाः क्षीरवारिनिधिशायिनः प्रभोर् निष्फलं त्वथ बभूव तेजसा
tatra tatpratikṛtaṃ tadā surair daityarājatanayaṃ dvijottamāḥ kṣīravārinidhiśāyinaḥ prabhor niṣphalaṃ tvatha babhūva tejasā
Doon, O pinakamahusay sa mga isinilang nang dalawang beses, ang ganti ng mga diyos laban sa anak ng haring Daitya ay nawalan ng saysay, sapagkat ito ay pinawalang-bisa ng nagliliyab na kapangyarihan ng Panginoon na nakahiga sa Karagatan ng Gatas.
Suta Goswami
It underscores that worldly power and even divine retaliation are ineffective without alignment to the Supreme Pati; Linga worship trains the pashu (soul) to seek refuge in that highest tejas through devotion and right ritual.
By highlighting ‘tejas’ that makes all opposing acts fruitless, it points to the Shaiva Siddhanta idea of Pati as the sovereign power whose grace and spiritual potency alone can dissolve pasha (bondage) and neutralize hostile forces.
The implied takeaway is Pashupata-oriented discipline: actions must be consecrated to the Lord (īśvara-arpaṇa) and supported by mantra, worship, and inner steadiness; otherwise they remain merely reactive and yield no siddhi.