जलंधरयुद्धे मायाप्रयोगः — Jalandhara’s Māyā in the Battle with Śiva
हंतुं चराचरं सर्वं समर्थोऽहं सवासवम् । को महेश्वर मद्बाणैरभेद्यो भुवनत्रये । बालभावेन भगवांतपसैव विनिर्जितः । ब्रह्मा बलिष्ठः स्थाने मे मुनिभिस्सुरपुंगवैः
haṃtuṃ carācaraṃ sarvaṃ samartho'haṃ savāsavam | ko maheśvara madbāṇairabhedyo bhuvanatraye | bālabhāvena bhagavāṃtapasaiva vinirjitaḥ | brahmā baliṣṭhaḥ sthāne me munibhissurapuṃgavaiḥ
„Ich vermag alles Bewegliche und Unbewegliche zu vernichten — selbst mitsamt Indra und den Göttern. O Maheśvara, wer in den drei Welten ist von meinen Pfeilen nicht zu durchbohren? Wahrlich, sogar der Herr (Brahmā) wurde durch meine Askese bezwungen, als wäre es nur ein kindisches Spiel. Brahmā, obgleich als der Stärkste gepriesen, steht an seinem Platz meinetwegen — (gestützt) von Weisen und den erhabensten unter den Devas.“
An arrogant warrior (asura-like opponent) addressing Lord Śiva as Maheśvara in the Yuddhakhaṇḍa battle narrative
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Rudra
The verse highlights ahaṅkāra (spiritual pride): power, weapons, and even tapas become bondage when used to boast against Maheśvara; Śiva’s supremacy is not merely martial but metaphysical—He is Pati, beyond the three worlds.
Calling Śiva “Maheśvara” in a challenge contrasts human/asuric confidence with Saguna Śiva as the accessible Lord who still transcends all worlds; Linga-worship disciplines ego, turning power-seeking into surrender and devotion.
A practical takeaway is ego-purification through japa of the Pañcākṣarī (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) with vibhūti (Tripuṇḍra) remembrance—offering one’s strength and achievements to Śiva rather than claiming them as “mine.”