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Shloka 55

Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma

नात्यर्थं धार्मिका ये च तान् सर्वान् हन्ति सर्वतः वर्णव्यत्यासजाताश् च ये च ताननुजीविनः

nātyarthaṃ dhārmikā ye ca tān sarvān hanti sarvataḥ varṇavyatyāsajātāś ca ye ca tānanujīvinaḥ

ధర్మంలో నిజంగా స్థిరపడని వారిని అతడు అన్ని వైపులా సంహరిస్తాడు; వర్ణవ్యత్యాసమున పుట్టినవారిని, వారిపై ఆధారపడి జీవించువారిని కూడ నాశనం చేస్తాడు।

nanot
na:
atyarthamtruly/excessively (in the sense of firmly)
atyartham:
dhārmikāḥrighteous, followers of dharma
dhārmikāḥ:
yewho
ye:
caand
ca:
tānthem
tān:
sarvānall
sarvān:
hantikills/destroys
hanti:
sarvataḥfrom all sides, everywhere
sarvataḥ:
varṇa-vyatyāsareversal/mixture/confusion of varṇas (social orders)
varṇa-vyatyāsa:
jātāḥborn/arisen
jātāḥ:
caand
ca:
yewho
ye:
caand
ca:
tān-anujīvinaḥthose who subsist by them, dependents/followers living off them
tān-anujīvinaḥ:

Suta Goswami

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames Shiva (Pati) as the purifier of the field of dharma, removing adharma and social-spiritual disorder—an inner prerequisite for sincere Linga-puja and Pashupata discipline.

Shiva-tattva is shown as the governing Lord who restrains chaos: when pashus become bound by pasha through unrighteous living, Shiva acts as the cosmic regulator who dissolves those forces that obstruct dharma.

The implied practice is ethical purification (yama-like restraint) as part of Pashupata orientation—rejecting adharma and dependency-based living so that worship and yoga are grounded in sattvic conduct.