त्रिपुरदाहवर्णनम् | Tripura-dāha-varṇanam
Description of the Burning of Tripura
सन्निपातो हि येषां नो विद्यते नाशकारकः । दैत्यानामन्यसत्त्वानां भावाभावे कृताकृते
sannipāto hi yeṣāṃ no vidyate nāśakārakaḥ | daityānāmanyasattvānāṃ bhāvābhāve kṛtākṛte
നാശം വരുത്തുന്ന കാരണങ്ങളുടെ സംയോഗം യാരിലും ഇല്ലെങ്കിൽ—ദൈത്യരിലായാലും മറ്റു സത്ത്വങ്ങളിലായാലും—ഭാവവും അഭാവവും എന്ന നിലകളിൽ ‘കൃതം’ ‘അകൃതം’ എന്ന ബന്ധനഫലം ഉണ്ടാകുകയില്ല.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Yuddhakhaṇḍa account to the sages at Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pasha
Sthala Purana: A metaphysical aside: where the ‘sannipāta’ (conjunction of causal conditions) that produces destruction is absent, the dualities of bhāva/abhāva and kṛta/akṛta lose operative force. In Siddhānta terms, this hints at how karmic causality binds only within māyā’s causal nexus.
Significance: Encourages philosophical discernment: seeing ‘done/undone’ as binding only under pāśa; supports contemplative detachment and reliance on Śiva’s grace to transcend causal entanglement.
Role: teaching
It highlights that destruction and karmic consequence depend on a specific conjunction of causes; without that operative nexus, events do not yield binding ‘done/undone’ results—pointing to Shiva as the ultimate governor beyond mere material causality.
In Shaiva understanding, Saguna Shiva (worshipped as the Liṅga) is the Lord who presides over creation, preservation, and dissolution; this verse underscores that outcomes like destruction are not random but occur under a higher order ultimately rooted in Shiva’s governance.
A practical takeaway is steady japa of the Pañcākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) with Tripuṇḍra and Rudrākṣa, cultivating insight that Shiva alone is the decisive cause beyond shifting conditions of bhāva/abhāva.