Harihara Non-Duality and the Revelation of Sadasiva to the Ganas
दण्डपाणिं सुदुर्दृश्यं लोकैर्व्याप्तं समन्ततः दण्डसंस्थास्य दृश्यन्ते देवप्रहरणास्तथा
daṇḍapāṇiṃ sudurdṛśyaṃ lokairvyāptaṃ samantataḥ daṇḍasaṃsthāsya dṛśyante devapraharaṇāstathā
Vieron al Señor con el bastón (daṇḍa) en la mano—una visión sobrecogedora y difícil de contemplar—que lo penetraba todo, abarcando los mundos por doquier; y en torno a aquella manifestación semejante a un bastón, aparecieron también las armas divinas.
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "raudra", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Daṇḍa signifies sovereign authority, restraint, and punitive justice—cosmic governance that corrects adharma. In battle-linked narratives like Andhaka’s episode, it marks Śiva as the ultimate regulator of disorder.
The verse suggests a visionary convergence of divine powers: weapons are not merely objects but embodiments of śakti. Their appearance indicates that the Lord’s single emblem (daṇḍa) functions as an axis around which multiple divine forces become manifest.
Purāṇic theophanies often exceed ordinary sensory capacity. ‘Hard to behold’ conveys both the overwhelming radiance/terror of the divine and the ontological gap between finite perception and infinite reality.