मुनिमोहशमनम्
Pāśupata-yoga, Siddhis, Puruṣa-darśana, Saṃsāra, and Prāṇa-Rudra Pañcāhutī
एवं जीवास्तु तैः पापैस् तप्यमानाः स्वयंकृतैः प्राप्नुयुः कर्मभिः शेषैर् दुःखं वा यदि वेतरत्
evaṃ jīvāstu taiḥ pāpais tapyamānāḥ svayaṃkṛtaiḥ prāpnuyuḥ karmabhiḥ śeṣair duḥkhaṃ vā yadi vetarat
如是,诸有身之魂(paśu)为自作之罪所灼烧,便依其业之余残而受得:或为苦,或为其反(安乐),皆随所余待熟之分而定。
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames why Shiva-Linga worship is sought: the paśu burns in self-made pāpa and cycles through duḥkha/sukha by karma-śeṣa; devotion to Pati (Shiva) is the turn toward purification and release from pāśa.
Implicitly, Shiva-tattva stands as Pati beyond karmic compulsion: while the soul experiences the ripening of its own deeds, liberation requires the Lord’s grace and the soul’s turning from bondage (pāśa) toward Him.
No single rite is named, but the teaching supports Pāśupata-oriented discipline—ethical restraint, expiation, and Shiva-bhakti—aimed at exhausting karma-śeṣa and loosening pāśa.