Viśveśvara-māhātmya and the Nirguṇa–Saguṇa Emergence of Śiva (Śakti–Puruṣa/Prakṛti Discourse)
तदधिष्ठाय हरिणा सृष्टिकामनया ततः । बहुकालं तपस्तप्तं तद्ध्यानमवलंब्य च
tadadhiṣṭhāya hariṇā sṛṣṭikāmanayā tataḥ | bahukālaṃ tapastaptaṃ taddhyānamavalaṃbya ca
その後、ハリ(ヴィシュヌ)は創造を顕現せんとの願いをもって、その聖なる依処(座・住処)に帰依し、久遠にも等しき長き時にわたりタパス(苦行)を修し、「かの御方」すなわち至上主シヴァへの禅観に堅く依り続けた。
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Sthala Purana: The verse frames Viṣṇu’s creative impulse (sṛṣṭikāmanā) as dependent on tapas and dhyāna upon the Supreme (Śiva), a Purāṇic motif where even cosmic functions proceed by Śiva’s sanction/grace rather than independent agency.
Significance: Establishes the doctrinal basis for approaching Śiva as the ultimate source of empowerment for creation and right order; supports the Śaiva Siddhānta view of Pati as the efficient cause who grants capacity to other deities.
Cosmic Event: Pre-creational orientation: the impulse toward sṛṣṭi is shown as arising after prolonged tapas, echoing a ‘before-creation’ (sarga-prāk) contemplative interval.
It teaches that even cosmic functions like creation become fruitful only when grounded in tapas and dhyāna directed to Lord Śiva—the supreme Pati—showing Śiva as the ultimate support of all divine action.
By saying Hari takes refuge in a sacred support and meditates on ‘That,’ the verse aligns with Saguna worship where Śiva is approached through a concrete support (often understood as the Liṅga/abode) and through focused contemplation leading to divine grace.
Sustained tapas with steady dhyāna on Śiva—practically expressed through japa of the Pañcākṣarī (Om Namaḥ Śivāya), inner concentration, and disciplined observances typical of Mahāśivarātri-style vrata.