Sadācāra–Varṇa-lakṣaṇa and Prātaḥkṛtya
Right Conduct, Social Typologies, and Morning Purification
भोगमोक्षप्रदे धर्मे ज्ञाने च प्रेरयेत्सदा । इत्थमर्थं धियाध्यायन्ब्रह्मप्राप्नोति निश्चयः
bhogamokṣaprade dharme jñāne ca prerayetsadā | itthamarthaṃ dhiyādhyāyanbrahmaprāpnoti niścayaḥ
当恒常劝发众生趋向正法与解脱之智;二者既赐世间安乐,亦授究竟解脱。以明净之慧观此义理者,必定证得梵(即湿婆),无有疑惑。
Suta Goswami (narrating Shaiva doctrine to the sages at Naimisharanya, as typical for the Vidyeshvara/Viśveśvara section)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
Role: teaching
It teaches that a complete Shaiva life unites dharma (right living) with jñāna (liberating insight). When one contemplates this purport and lives it, one reaches the Supreme—Śiva as Brahman—culminating in moksha.
In the Vidyeshvara context, Linga-worship is the practical support for dharma and jñāna: it disciplines conduct (dharma) and focuses contemplation (jñāna), leading from Saguna devotion to realization of Śiva as the Supreme Reality.
The verse emphasizes contemplative meditation on the teaching’s purport; in Shaiva practice this is commonly supported by daily Shiva-puja, japa of the Panchakshara (Om Namaḥ Śivāya), and steady cultivation of dharmic conduct.