Mahādeva’s Boon: Unwavering Bhakti, Tri-functional Cosmos, and the Supratiṣṭhā of Liṅga-Arcā
एवमुक्त्वा तु तं विष्णुं कराभ्यां परमेश्वरः पस्पर्श सुभगाभ्यां तु कृपया तु कृपानिधिः
evamuktvā tu taṃ viṣṇuṃ karābhyāṃ parameśvaraḥ pasparśa subhagābhyāṃ tu kṛpayā tu kṛpānidhiḥ
对毗湿奴说罢,至上主宰(帕拉梅湿伐罗)——慈悲之宝藏——以其吉祥双手,出于纯然恩典,温柔触抚于他。
Suta Goswami (narrating the episode; internal action by Shiva toward Vishnu)
It highlights anugraha (Shiva’s grace) as the decisive power behind spiritual awakening—Linga worship is not merely external ritual, but a means by which Pati bestows inner purification and right knowledge upon the pashu.
Shiva is portrayed as Parameśvara (Pati) and kṛpānidhi (storehouse of compassion): sovereign and transcendent, yet intimately responsive, guiding even exalted beings through benevolent, liberating grace.
The motif of sparśa (divine touch) implies śaktipāta-like descent of grace—an inner yogic transmission central to Pāśupata orientation, where liberation arises through Shiva’s favor alongside discipline and devotion.