Kāraṇa-vyākhyā: Cosmic Agents, Rudra-Forms, Sense-Purity, and Ānanda-Tāratamya
सदाशिव इति त्वाख्यामवाप स विनाशकः / तमोभिमानी स ज्ञेयस्त्वशिवत्वात्सदाशिवः
sadāśiva iti tvākhyāmavāpa sa vināśakaḥ / tamobhimānī sa jñeyastvaśivatvātsadāśivaḥ
Ele passou a ser conhecido pelo nome “Sadāśiva”, pois é o Destruidor. Deve ser entendido como aquele que se identifica com tamas, a escuridão; e, contudo, por não ser inauspicioso, é chamado “Sadāśiva”, o Sempre-Auspicioso.
Lord Vishnu
Concept: A deity may be functionally destructive and guṇa-identified (tamas) yet remain ‘śiva’ (auspicious) in ultimate theological valuation.
Vedantic Theme: Guṇa-based functions belong to prakṛti’s operations; auspiciousness can be understood as alignment with cosmic order under the Supreme, not mere surface symbolism.
Application: Reframe necessary endings (loss, dissolution, pruning) as potentially auspicious when aligned with dharma and spiritual growth.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: raudra
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.18.15 (skull-garland and distinction from Bhāgavata-Śiva)
This verse explains that Shiva is called “Sadāśiva” because, though he performs destruction and is associated with tamas, his essential nature is not inauspicious—hence “ever-auspicious.”
It frames destruction (vināśa) as a cosmic function rather than evil, clarifying that the principle linked with dissolution and tamas can still be fundamentally auspicious.
View endings—loss, change, closure—as part of necessary transformation, and cultivate discernment so that what appears “dark” or difficult is handled with reverence and ethical steadiness.