Harihara Non-Duality and the Revelation of Sadasiva to the Ganas
तदा निर्धूतपापास्ते समजायन्त पार्षदाः तेष्वेवं धूतपापेषु अभिन्नेषु हरीश्वरः
tadā nirdhūtapāpāste samajāyanta pārṣadāḥ teṣvevaṃ dhūtapāpeṣu abhinneṣu harīśvaraḥ
عندئذٍ، وقد زُلزلت خطاياهم وزالت، صاروا أهلًا لأن يكونوا من البارشَدَة (الخَدَم المقرّبين). وحين تطهّروا هكذا واستقرّوا في عدم التمايز، تجلّى هاري-إيشڤارا (الربّ المتّحد بوصفه هاري وشيفا) في ما بينهم.
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Pārṣada denotes a deity’s attendant—one admitted into the divine retinue. In Purāṇic idiom it signifies elevated spiritual status and proximity to the deity, often as a fruit of tīrtha-merit and right knowledge.
The passage links purification to jñāna and abheda-vision (non-difference). In the Saro-mahātmya setting, tīrtha practice and insight are typically paired: the tīrtha supports inner transformation, and insight consummates it.
Harīśvara is a unitive epithet—Hari (Viṣṇu) and Īśvara (Śiva) understood as one lord. It functions as a theological bridge, affirming that devotion to either culminates in the same supreme reality.