वीरभद्र-भैरव-आह्वानम् — Invocation of Vīrabhadra/Bhairava for Cosmic Reabsorption
इत्थं सर्वं समालोक्य संहारात्मानमात्मना । न विनष्टन्त्वमात्मानं कुरु हे नृहरेऽबुध
itthaṃ sarvaṃ samālokya saṃhārātmānamātmanā | na vinaṣṭantvamātmānaṃ kuru he nṛhare'budha
かくして、汝みずからの内なる覚知によって一切を観よ—滅尽を本性とする自己そのものとして。おおヌリハリ(Nṛhari)よ、己を滅びたものと見なすな。無知なる者よ、真我を「破壊されるもの」として作りなすな。
Lord Shiva (inferred, Shatarudrasaṃhitā teaching context)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Rudra
Sthala Purana: Not a Jyotirliṅga episode; it is a doctrinal admonition about the Self’s non-destruction even amid saṃhāra.
Significance: Frames Śiva as the inner ruler of dissolution; contemplation at cremation-ground Śiva temples (śmaśāna-kṣetra) aligns with this teaching of imperishability beyond withdrawal.
Role: teaching
Cosmic Event: saṃhāra (cosmic withdrawal) invoked as a metaphysical frame
It teaches discernment (viveka): even when the cosmos undergoes saṃhāra (withdrawal), the true Self is not annihilated. Shiva points to the indestructible spiritual principle beyond fear and loss.
The Liṅga signifies Shiva as the eternal ground beyond creation and dissolution. Worship of Saguna Shiva steadies the mind, leading the devotee to recognize the Nirguna reality—Selfhood that cannot be destroyed.
Meditate on Shiva as the inner witness during change (saṃhāra-bhāvanā), repeating the Panchākṣarī “Om Namaḥ Śivāya” to dissolve the notion “I am destroyed” and rest in the undying Self.