महाकालज्योतिर्लिङ्गमाहात्म्ये चन्द्रसेन-चिन्तामणि-प्रसङ्गः
Mahākāla Jyotirliṅga Māhātmya: The Episode of King Candrasena and the Cintāmaṇi
निर्विकल्पो निराहारस्स नृपो दृढनिश्चयः । समानर्च महाकालं दिवा नक्तमनन्यधीः
nirvikalpo nirāhārassa nṛpo dṛḍhaniścayaḥ | samānarca mahākālaṃ divā naktamananyadhīḥ
Jener König, ohne Schwanken, fastend und fest entschlossen, verehrte Mahākāla in standhafter Hingabe, bei Tag und bei Nacht, den Geist auf keinen anderen gerichtet.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Mahākāla
Jyotirlinga: Mahākāleśvara
Sthala Purana: Candrasena performs unwavering worship—fasting, day and night—of Mahākāla. The intensity of bhakti and ekāgratā becomes the immediate cause (nimitta) for Śiva’s protective response in the kṣetra of Ujjayinī.
Significance: Teaches niṣṭhā (one-pointed devotion) and vrata-like discipline; inspires continuous remembrance (divā-naktam) at Mahākāla for protection and inner steadiness.
Mantra: नमः शिवाय
Type: panchakshara
Role: teaching
Offering: pushpa
It praises ananya-bhakti—exclusive, one-pointed devotion to Shiva—supported by vairagya (fasting/self-restraint) and dṛḍha-niścaya (firm resolve), which purifies the mind and leads toward Shiva’s grace and liberation.
Mahākāla is Saguna Shiva—Shiva approached through a sacred form and name. The verse emphasizes continuous worship (day and night), the hallmark of Linga-upasana where the devotee fixes the mind on Shiva as the supreme refuge.
Fasting (upavāsa/nirāhāra) paired with uninterrupted remembrance and worship—japa and dhyāna with one-pointed attention—especially suitable for Mahāśivarātri-style observance and sustained Shiva-smarana.