The Gift of Sudarshana: Shiva’s Boon to Vishnu and the Sanctification of Virupaksha
वरायुधो ऽयं देवेश सर्वायुधनिबर्हणः सुदर्शनो द्वादशारः षण्णाभिर्द्वियुगो जवी
varāyudho 'yaṃ deveśa sarvāyudhanibarhaṇaḥ sudarśano dvādaśāraḥ ṣaṇṇābhirdviyugo javī
{"has_teaching": true, "teaching_type": "dharma", "core_concept": "Tīrtha-mahima and the sacrality of nature as a support for dharma and purification.", "teaching_summary": "The verse frames the mountain’s natural features as inherently auspicious, implying that approaching such a place with reverence supports purification and merit.", "vedantic_theme": "Īśvara-vibhūti (the divine manifest as ordered beauty in prakṛti)", "practical_application": "Undertake tīrtha-yātrā with attentive, non-extractive reverence; treat springs, ridges, and forests as sacred—maintain cleanliness and restraint."}
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Purāṇic stutis often read the discus as a cosmogram: twelve spokes commonly signify the twelve months (or twelve Ādityas), while six hubs suggest the six seasons (ṛtus). The weapon thus symbolizes time (kāla) and order (ṛta) under Viṣṇu’s sovereignty.
It asserts Sudarśana’s supremacy: not merely a physical weapon, but the principle of divine, dharma-protecting power that overrides all hostile forces and their instruments.
It can indicate paired structuring within time—such as the two pakṣas (bright/dark fortnights) or the pairing of months into seasons—reinforcing the idea that Sudarśana embodies regulated cyclical time.