Arjuna–Gaṇa Saṃvāda: Bāṇādhikāra, Tāpasa-veṣa, and the Ethics of Tapas (अर्जुन-गणसंवादः)
शत्रुश्च मारितस्तेन पुनर्बाणश्च रक्षितः । अत्यन्तं च कृतघ्नोसि तपोशुभकरस्तथा
śatruśca māritastena punarbāṇaśca rakṣitaḥ | atyantaṃ ca kṛtaghnosi tapośubhakarastathā
Par lui l’ennemi fut abattu, et pourtant Bāṇa fut de nouveau protégé. Malgré cela, tu es d’une ingratitude extrême, bien que ton austérité soit dite auspicious et porteuse de mérite.
Lord Shiva (addressing an opponent/accuser within the Bāṇa narrative context)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Rudra
It highlights Shiva’s siddhānta-aligned balance of anugraha (grace) and nigraha (restraint): even when Shiva protects a devotee or penitent like Bāṇa, ingratitude and adharmic intent are condemned, showing that tapas must mature into humility and right conduct.
Saguna Shiva is shown as the personal Lord who intervenes in history—destroying threats while still granting protection. Linga-worship trains the devotee to receive such grace with devotion and dharma, not with entitlement or betrayal.
The takeaway is to pair tapas with bhakti and ethical restraint: daily japa of the Panchākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) with a vow of gratitude and non-harm, so austerity becomes purifying rather than pride-forming.