Adhyaya 75: Nishkala–Sakala Shiva, Twofold Linga, and the Supremacy of Dhyana-Yajna
नास्ति क्रिया च लोकेषु सुखं दुःखं विचारतः धर्माधर्मौ जपो होमो ध्यानिनां संनिधिः सदा
nāsti kriyā ca lokeṣu sukhaṃ duḥkhaṃ vicārataḥ dharmādharmau japo homo dhyānināṃ saṃnidhiḥ sadā
سچی تمیز کے ساتھ دیکھا جائے تو دنیا میں کوئی عمل بذاتِ خود نہ خوشی ہے نہ غم۔ اسی طرح دھرم و اَدھرم، جپ اور ہوم—یہ سب اہلِ دھیان کے لیے ہمیشہ قربِ سَنِّدھی میں رہتے ہیں، کیونکہ ان کی باطنی توجہ تمام اعمال کو پتی-پرمیشر کے حضور جمع کر دیتی ہے۔
Suta Goswami (narrating the teaching within the Linga Purana’s discourse on discernment and practice)
It frames ritual (kriyā) as not intrinsically producing sukha or duḥkha; in Linga worship, outer acts mature when joined to vicāra and dhyāna, where devotion to Pati (Shiva) internalizes the essence of japa and homa.
By implying that dualities like pleasure/pain and even dharma/adharma are grasped differently through discernment, it points to Shiva as Pati—ever-present to the dhyānin—beyond worldly oppositions, the steady ground in which practices find their true meaning.
Dhyāna supported by vicāra is emphasized: for the contemplative, japa and homa are ‘always present’—suggesting the Pashupata-oriented interiorization of rites into continuous remembrance and meditative absorption.