Varaha-Pradurbhava Context: Prahlada’s Bhakti, Narasimha’s Ugra-Form, and Shiva’s Sharabha Intervention
नादैस्तस्य नृसिंहस्य घोरैर्वित्रासितं जगत् आ ब्रह्मभुवनाद् विप्राः प्रचचाल च सुव्रताः
nādaistasya nṛsiṃhasya ghorairvitrāsitaṃ jagat ā brahmabhuvanād viprāḥ pracacāla ca suvratāḥ
اس نرسِمْہ کی ہولناک دہاڑوں سے سارا جگت دہشت زدہ ہو گیا؛ اور اے نیک ورت والے برہمنو، برہملوک تک کے برہمن بھی لرز کر جنبش میں آ گئے۔
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It highlights how even the highest created realm (Brahmā’s world) can be shaken by divine power, implying that true refuge for the pashu (bound soul) is not in any loka but in the Pati—approached in Shaiva practice through Linga-upāsanā.
Though Narasiṃha is named, the verse emphasizes a power that overwhelms the entire jagat, pointing to the Shaiva Siddhānta insight that all manifest forces operate within the Lord’s sovereignty; Shiva-tattva stands as the stabilizing Pati beyond the trembling of the worlds.
A direct ritual is not stated, but the takeaway aligns with Pāśupata Yoga: cultivate fearlessness through surrender and inward steadiness (vairāgya and śaraṇāgati) to the Pati, rather than reliance on worldly or even celestial supports.