कालतत्त्वनिर्णयः / Doctrine of Kāla (Time) and Its Subordination to Śiva
भूतभव्यभविष्याद्यैर्विभज्य जरयन् प्रजाः । अतिप्रभुरिति स्वैरं वर्तते ऽतिभयंकरः
bhūtabhavyabhaviṣyādyairvibhajya jarayan prajāḥ | atiprabhuriti svairaṃ vartate 'tibhayaṃkaraḥ
Indem er die Wesen in Vergangenheit, Gegenwart und Zukunft einteilt, zehrt er die Geschöpfe aus und lässt sie altern. Sich für „allübermächtig“ haltend, wandelt er nach Belieben—wahrlich höchst furchterregend.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Mahākāla
Jyotirlinga: Mahākāleśvara
Sthala Purana: Mahākāla is revered as the Lord who subdues Time; the Ujjayinī liṅga is famed as a self-manifesting center where Śiva is worshipped as Mahākāleśvara, the great Lord of Kāla, granting protection from untimely death and fear of time.
Significance: Darśana is sought for mastery over fear of death/time, steadiness of mind, and auspicious transformation through confronting impermanence.
Shakti Form: Kālī
Role: destructive
Cosmic Event: kāla as the cosmic aging-force dividing beings into past/present/future and consuming embodied life
It portrays Kāla (Time) as a fearsome power that classifies beings into past–present–future and thereby causes decay; Shaiva Siddhanta points the seeker to Pati (Shiva) as the one who transcends Kāla and grants release from this bondage.
Kāla appears as an overpowering lord within the world-process, but Linga-worship directs the mind to Shiva as the true Lord (Pati) who is beyond the divisions of time; Saguna Shiva becomes the accessible refuge through which the devotee crosses fear and mortality.
Meditate on Shiva as Kāla-tīta (beyond time) while repeating the Panchākṣarī “Om Namaḥ Śivāya,” and steady the mind with Tripuṇḍra (bhasma) and Rudrākṣa as reminders of impermanence and the vow to seek liberation.