यतिप्रायश्चित्तविधानम्
Ascetic Atonements and Discipline
भवेद्योगो ऽप्रमत्तस्य योगो हि परमं बलम् न हि योगात्परं किंचिन् नराणां दृश्यते शुभम्
bhavedyogo 'pramattasya yogo hi paramaṃ balam na hi yogātparaṃ kiṃcin narāṇāṃ dṛśyate śubham
对于警醒不迷者,瑜伽真实生起;瑜伽确为至上之力。诚然,人间不见有任何吉祥善益高于瑜伽——由此斩断系缚(pāśa),引导被缚之灵(paśu)趋向主宰 Pati。
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya, conveying Shaiva teaching as Purana instruction)
It frames external Linga-puja as incomplete without inner discipline: vigilant Yoga is declared the highest śubha, implying that worship should mature into Pashupata-style inward union with Shiva (Pati).
By presenting Yoga as the supreme power leading to the highest good, the verse implies Shiva as Pati—the ultimate refuge and goal—toward whom the paśu turns when pāśa (bondage) is weakened through yogic steadiness.
Apramāda (vigilant, unwavering attentiveness) as the core yogic requirement—aligned with Pashupata Yoga—where disciplined practice becomes the ‘paramaṃ balam’ that supports both meditation and purified worship.