Harihara Revelation and the Tirtha-Glorification of Saptasarasvata in Kurukshetra
इत्येवं चिन्तयन्तश्च देवावेतौ हरीश्वरौ कथं योगत्वमापन्नौ सत्त्वान्धतमसोद्भवौ
ityevaṃ cintayantaśca devāvetau harīśvarau kathaṃ yogatvamāpannau sattvāndhatamasodbhavau
Thus, while reflecting, the gods pondered these two—Hari and Īśvara: how had they attained a state of union (yoga), though arising from distinct sources, sattva and the blinding darkness (tamas)?
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
It uses a common Purāṇic heuristic that associates deities with guṇas for explanatory purposes. The point is not to reduce the gods to guṇas, but to highlight the wonder of their ‘yoga’—their unity beyond apparent guṇa-differentiation.
Primarily ontological unity: the Devas marvel at how Hari and Īśvara are integrated as one principle (Harīśvara), even when described through contrasting guṇa-origins.
The compound intensifies tamas as obscuration, sharpening the contrast with sattva (clarity). This rhetorical contrast makes the subsequent revelation of the supreme, all-formed Lord more theologically striking.