Harihara Non-Duality and the Revelation of Sadasiva to the Ganas
तस्मात् परतरं लोके नान्यद् धर्म हि विद्यते सात्त्विकं राजसं चैव तामसं मिश्रकं तथा स एव धत्ते भगवान् सर्वपूज्यः सदाशिवः
tasmāt parataraṃ loke nānyad dharma hi vidyate sāttvikaṃ rājasaṃ caiva tāmasaṃ miśrakaṃ tathā sa eva dhatte bhagavān sarvapūjyaḥ sadāśivaḥ
ដូច្នេះ ក្នុងលោកនេះ មិនមានធម៌ណាខ្ពស់ជាងព្រះអង្គឡើយ។ ធម៌សាត្វវិក (sāttvika) ធម៌រាជស (rājasa) ធម៌តាមស (tāmasa) ហើយក៏ធម៌ចម្រុះផង—ទាំងអស់នេះ ព្រះដ៏មានព្រះភាគផ្ទាល់ទ្រង់កាន់កាប់ និងកំណត់៖ សដាសិវៈ (Sadāśiva) អ្នកគួរឲ្យគោរពបូជាទាំងសព្វកាល។
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Purāṇic and Sāṃkhya-influenced discourse often classifies practices, intentions, and outcomes by the three guṇas. ‘Sāttvika dharma’ tends toward clarity and liberation-oriented virtue; ‘rājasa’ toward merit mixed with desire for results; ‘tāmasa’ toward delusion or harmful/ignorant religiosity; ‘miśraka’ indicates combinations found in ordinary life.
Here ‘dhatte’ is best read as ‘supports/establishes/assumes’—Sadāśiva is presented as the ultimate ground in which all dharmic modalities operate. It is a theological claim of sovereignty over the moral-cosmic order, not merely personal performance of rituals.
Within its Śaiva frame, it elevates Sadāśiva as supreme. In many Purāṇic contexts, such supremacy statements coexist with broader sectarian harmonizations elsewhere; the immediate intent is to assert Sadāśiva’s ultimacy as the source of dharma and guṇic diversity.