मुनिमोहशमनम्
Pāśupata-yoga, Siddhis, Puruṣa-darśana, Saṃsāra, and Prāṇa-Rudra Pañcāhutī
राजसं तामसं वापि भुक्त्वा तत्रैव मुच्यते ब्रह्मन् गुअरन्तेएस् लिबेरतिओन् तथा सुकृतकर्मा तु फलं स्वर्गे समश्नुते
rājasaṃ tāmasaṃ vāpi bhuktvā tatraiva mucyate brahman guarantees liberation tathā sukṛtakarmā tu phalaṃ svarge samaśnute
婆罗门啊,若已圆满受尽由罗阇斯或昏暗(怛摩斯)所生之业果,便在彼处即得解脱。行诸善业者,亦于天界受其福报。然而超越一切由诸古那所生的经验,还有更上的解脱:当心转向主宰帕提(湿婆)时,由其恩典,众生(pashu)得脱系缚(pasha)。
Suta Goswami (narrating the doctrinal point to the sages; addressing a Brahman within the narration)
It clarifies that heavenly or painful experiences are temporary karma-fruits; Linga worship aims higher—purifying the pashu and orienting it to Pati (Śiva) so bondage (pāśa) is finally cut rather than merely ‘enjoyed out’.
By implication, Śiva-tattva stands beyond rajas and tamas and is the liberating principle: karma-fruits end by exhaustion, but true moksha is secured by alignment with the transcendent Lord who is untouched by guṇa.
The takeaway supports Pāśupata-oriented discipline: reduce rajasic/tamasic impulses through vrata, japa, and Linga-pūjā, and seek guṇa-transcendence rather than svarga as the final aim.