वीरभद्र-भैरव-आह्वानम् — Invocation of Vīrabhadra/Bhairava for Cosmic Reabsorption
नो चेदिदानीं क्रोधस्य महाभैरवरूपिणः । वज्राशनिरिव स्थाणौ त्वयि मृत्युः पतिष्यति
no cedidānīṃ krodhasya mahābhairavarūpiṇaḥ | vajrāśaniriva sthāṇau tvayi mṛtyuḥ patiṣyati
إن لم تنسحب حتى الآن، فإن الموت سيقع عليك—كالصاعقة تضرب عمودًا—بهيئة الغضب العظمى المروِّعة.
Lord Shiva (as the force of Rudra, warning the offender)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Mahākāla
Sthala Purana: No direct Jyotirliṅga identification in the verse; the imagery of death/thunderbolt aligns thematically with Mahākāla motifs but remains non-sthāla.
Significance: Functions as a deterrent (niyama) teaching: disrespect/obstinacy before Rudra’s command leads to mṛtyu-bhaya; encourages humility and surrender to Śiva’s ordinance.
Shakti Form: Kālī
Role: destructive
Cosmic Event: daṇḍa-nyāya (punitive descent of death) framed through Rudra’s wrath
It warns that when ego and defiance persist, the same divine power that protects devotees appears as Mahābhairava—wrath as a purifying force—bringing the downfall of adharma and restoring right order under Pati (Shiva).
It emphasizes Saguna Shiva’s governance: the Lord is compassionate to the surrendered, yet formidable to those who violate dharma. Linga-worship trains humility and surrender, aligning the devotee with Shiva’s protective grace rather than confronting His corrective power.
A practical takeaway is to adopt surrender and restraint through japa of the Panchakshara ("Om Namaḥ Śivāya"), along with Tripuṇḍra (bhasma) and Rudrāksha as reminders to curb anger, ego, and hostility.