Adhyaya 44: Nandikesvara’s Manifestation and Abhisheka; The Rule of Namaskara in Shiva-Nama
ऋषयस्तुष्टुवुश्चैव पिता महपुरोगमाः स्तुतवत्सु ततस्तेषु विष्णुः सर्वजगत्पतिः
ṛṣayastuṣṭuvuścaiva pitā mahapurogamāḥ stutavatsu tatasteṣu viṣṇuḥ sarvajagatpatiḥ
Rồi các bậc ṛṣi cất lời tán tụng, với Đấng Cha (Brahmā) đứng đầu. Khi những bài ca ngợi ấy đã dứt, Viṣṇu—Chúa tể của toàn thể thế gian—liền hiện diện giữa họ.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Purana’s account)
It shows the Purāṇic principle that collective stuti and reverent approach—led by Brahmā and the ṛṣis—prepares the adhikāra (fitness) for divine revelation, a pattern also used to frame Linga-pratiṣṭhā and Śiva-pūjā outcomes.
By calling Viṣṇu “sarva-jagat-pati,” the verse uses Pati-language central to Śaiva Siddhānta: lordship belongs to the Supreme. In the Linga Purāṇa’s broader Hari-Hara vision, such lordship ultimately points to the one Pati beyond pasha (bondage), whom Śiva embodies as the transcendent Lord.
Stuti (devotional recitation) as an upāya: disciplined praise functions like a preparatory limb of sādhana—purifying the pashu (soul) and orienting it toward the Pati—often paired in the text with pūjā-vidhi and inner recollection akin to Pāśupata-oriented devotion.