Brahmā’s Yogic Vision of Sadyōjāta in the Śvetalohita Kalpa
ऋषय ऊचुः कथं वै दृष्टवान्ब्रह्मा सद्योजातं महेश्वरम् वामदेवं महात्मानं पुराणपुरुषोत्तमम्
ṛṣaya ūcuḥ kathaṃ vai dṛṣṭavānbrahmā sadyojātaṃ maheśvaram vāmadevaṃ mahātmānaṃ purāṇapuruṣottamam
Para resi berkata: “Bagaimanakah Brahmā benar-benar menyaksikan Maheśvara sebagai Sadyojāta, dan juga Vāmadeva yang berhati agung—Purāṇa Puruṣottama, Yang Tertinggi antara para Puruṣa yang kekal?”
Sages (Ṛṣis) at Naimiṣāraṇya (addressing Sūta’s narration)
It frames a key Shaiva inquiry: how Brahmā perceived Śiva’s manifest aspects (Sadyojāta and Vāmadeva), which underlies how the formless Pati becomes approachable through sacred form—central to Linga-upāsanā.
Śiva is identified as Maheśvara (Pati) and also as the Purāṇa-Puruṣottama—transcendent and primeval, yet capable of immediate manifestation as distinct divine aspects (Sadyojāta, Vāmadeva) for revelation to beings like Brahmā.
Implicitly, it points to Pañcabrahma-oriented contemplation (especially Sadyojāta/Vāmadeva) used in Shaiva mantra-upāsanā and Pāśupata-style meditation to recognize the Lord (Pati) beyond the bonds (Pāśa) of created cognition.