Vighneshvara-Prashna and Deva-Krita Shiva-Stava
Adhyaya 104
ततो ऽस्माकं सुरश्रेष्ठाः सदा विजयसंभवः तेषां ततस्तु विघ्नार्थम् अविघ्नाय दिवौकसाम्
tato 'smākaṃ suraśreṣṭhāḥ sadā vijayasaṃbhavaḥ teṣāṃ tatastu vighnārtham avighnāya divaukasām
تب، اے دیوتاؤں کے برگزیدو، ہماری جانب ہمیشہ فتح مقدر تھی۔ اس لیے اُن کے لیے رکاوٹیں پیدا کرنے اور آسمانی باسیوں کے لیے بے رکاوٹ کامیابی قائم رکھنے کو ایک الٰہی ضدّی قوت حرکت میں آئی۔
Suta Goswami (narrating the Purana; reporting the Deva-side account)
It frames “vighna” (obstacle) and “avighna” (unobstructedness) as divinely governed—supporting the Linga-centric view that Pati (Shiva) grants protection and removes impediments for dharmic order.
Even when Shiva is not named, the verse implies a higher governance that distributes obstruction and unobstruction; in Shaiva Siddhanta terms, this points to Pati’s lordship over pasha (bondage/impediments) and His capacity to grant anugraha (grace).
The takeaway is vighna-nivarana: worship oriented to removing obstacles—commonly expressed through Linga-puja with mantra, purity, and steadfast dharma, aligning the pashu (soul) toward unobstructed practice.