प्रसाद-ज्ञान-योग-मोक्षक्रमः तथा व्यास-रुद्रावतार-मन्वन्तर-परम्परा
तेन प्रणीतो रुद्रेण पशूनां पतिना द्विजाः योगः पाशुपतो ज्ञेयः परावरविभूतये
tena praṇīto rudreṇa paśūnāṃ patinā dvijāḥ yogaḥ pāśupato jñeyaḥ parāvaravibhūtaye
اے دِوِجوں، پشوؤں (بندھ جیووں) کے پتی رُدر نے جو یہ پاشوپت یوگ بتایا ہے، اسے جاننا چاہیے—پر اور اَپر دونوں قسم کی وِبھوتیوں کے حصول کے لیے۔
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames Śiva as Paśupati—the Lord of bound souls—and presents Pāśupata Yoga as Śiva’s own revealed means for gaining Śaiva power and moving toward liberation, which is the inner aim behind Linga-centered worship.
Śiva is identified as Pati, the sovereign controller and liberator of the paśu (the soul bound by pāśa). This implies Shiva-tattva as supreme lordship that governs both transcendent (para) and immanent (avara) domains.
Pāśupata Yoga is highlighted—the Śaiva discipline taught by Rudra for attaining siddhi (vibhūti) and ultimately mastering the higher and lower states, aligning the paśu toward freedom from pāśa.