कालतत्त्वनिर्णयः / Doctrine of Kāla (Time) and Its Subordination to Śiva
भूतभव्यभविष्याद्यैर्विभज्य जरयन् प्रजाः । अतिप्रभुरिति स्वैरं वर्तते ऽतिभयंकरः
bhūtabhavyabhaviṣyādyairvibhajya jarayan prajāḥ | atiprabhuriti svairaṃ vartate 'tibhayaṃkaraḥ
Dengan membahagi makhluk kepada yang lampau, kini dan akan datang, Dia melunturkan serta menua-kan segala ciptaan. Menganggap diri “Maha Berkuasa”, Dia bergerak sesuka hati—amat menggerunkan sekali.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Mahākāla
Jyotirlinga: Mahākāleśvara
Sthala Purana: Mahākāla is revered as the Lord who subdues Time; the Ujjayinī liṅga is famed as a self-manifesting center where Śiva is worshipped as Mahākāleśvara, the great Lord of Kāla, granting protection from untimely death and fear of time.
Significance: Darśana is sought for mastery over fear of death/time, steadiness of mind, and auspicious transformation through confronting impermanence.
Shakti Form: Kālī
Role: destructive
Cosmic Event: kāla as the cosmic aging-force dividing beings into past/present/future and consuming embodied life
It portrays Kāla (Time) as a fearsome power that classifies beings into past–present–future and thereby causes decay; Shaiva Siddhanta points the seeker to Pati (Shiva) as the one who transcends Kāla and grants release from this bondage.
Kāla appears as an overpowering lord within the world-process, but Linga-worship directs the mind to Shiva as the true Lord (Pati) who is beyond the divisions of time; Saguna Shiva becomes the accessible refuge through which the devotee crosses fear and mortality.
Meditate on Shiva as Kāla-tīta (beyond time) while repeating the Panchākṣarī “Om Namaḥ Śivāya,” and steady the mind with Tripuṇḍra (bhasma) and Rudrākṣa as reminders of impermanence and the vow to seek liberation.