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Shloka 40

Adhyaya 59 — सूर्याद्यभिषेककथनम्

Surya and Related Abhisheka/ Cosmological Determinations

हेमन्ते ताम्रवर्णस्तु शिशिरे लोहितो रविः इति वर्णाः समाख्याता मया सूर्यसमुद्भवाः

hemante tāmravarṇastu śiśire lohito raviḥ iti varṇāḥ samākhyātā mayā sūryasamudbhavāḥ

ஹேமந்தத்தில் சூரியன் செம்பு நிறமாகத் தோன்றுகிறான்; சிசிரத்தில் ரவி சிவப்பு நிறமாகத் தோன்றுகிறான்; இவ்வாறு சூரியனிலிருந்து எழும் பருவ நிறங்களை நான் கூறினேன்—இவை ஆண்டவனின் ஒழுங்கான ஆட்சியின் குறியீடுகள்।

hemantein Hemanta season (early winter)
hemante:
tāmravarṇaḥcopper-coloured
tāmravarṇaḥ:
tuindeed
tu:
śiśirein Śiśira season (late winter)
śiśire:
lohitaḥred
lohitaḥ:
raviḥthe Sun
raviḥ:
itithus
iti:
varṇāḥcolours/complexions
varṇāḥ:
samākhyātāḥhave been explained/declared
samākhyātāḥ:
mayāby me
mayā:
sūrya-samudbhavāḥborn of/produced from the Sun
sūrya-samudbhavāḥ:

Suta Goswami

S
Surya
R
Ravi

FAQs

It frames natural time (kāla) and its visible signs—like the Sun’s changing hues—as a regulated manifestation of divine order, supporting the Shaiva view that worship aligns the pashu (soul) with Pati’s cosmic rhythm.

Though Surya is named, the teaching implies Shiva-tattva as the supreme regulator of kāla and niyati (order), through which phenomena appear in lawful patterns—an expression of Pati’s governance over the world of pasha (bondage).

A practical takeaway is kāla-śuddhi: timing Shiva-puja with awareness of seasonal cycles, using nature’s markers to cultivate disciplined observance (niyama) supportive of Pashupata-oriented steadiness.