Harihara Non-Duality and the Revelation of Sadasiva to the Ganas
अजानन्त तदैक्येन ब्रह्मविष्ण्वीशभास्करान् यदाभिन्नममन्यन्त देवेदेवं सदाशिवम्
ajānanta tadaikyena brahmaviṣṇvīśabhāskarān yadābhinnamamanyanta devedevaṃ sadāśivam
Then, through that realization of oneness, they came to know the truth: when they regarded Brahmā, Viṣṇu, Īśa (Śiva), and Bhāskara (the Sun) as non-different, they understood Sadāśiva—the God of gods—as the single divine reality.
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The key term is abhinna (‘non-different’). In Purāṇic theology this commonly means unity of essence/power (tattva/śakti) while allowing distinct names, forms, and functions in worship and myth.
Including Bhāskara signals a comprehensive ‘pantheon-in-one’ vision: even prominent Vedic/Smārta deities like Sūrya are integrated into the single supreme reality, reinforcing the universality of the teaching.
Purāṇas often express unity through a chosen theological lens. Here the unity is articulated with Sadāśiva as the naming-point of the supreme, without denying the same supremacy to Viṣṇu in other contexts—hence a sect-transcending abheda framed in Shaiva idiom.