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Shloka 39

Varaha-Pradurbhava Context: Prahlada’s Bhakti, Narasimha’s Ugra-Form, and Shiva’s Sharabha Intervention

सदसद्व्यक्तिहीनाय महतः कारणाय ते नित्याय विश्वरूपाय जायमानाय ते नमः

sadasadvyaktihīnāya mahataḥ kāraṇāya te nityāya viśvarūpāya jāyamānāya te namaḥ

సత్-అసత్, వ్యక్త-అవ్యక్త భేదాలకు అతీతుడవై, మహత్‌కూ కారణమై, నిత్యుడవై, విశ్వరూపుడవై, సృష్టి-అనుగ్రహార్థం జన్మించినట్లు ప్రకాశించు నీకు నమస్కారం।

satbeing/reality
sat:
asatnon-being/that which is unmanifest
asat:
vyaktimanifest particularity/individualized expression
vyakti:
hīnāyadevoid of, beyond
hīnāya:
mahataḥof Mahat (cosmic intellect, first evolute of prakṛti)
mahataḥ:
kāraṇāyato the cause
kāraṇāya:
teto You
te:
nityāyato the eternal
nityāya:
viśvarūpāyato the one whose form is the universe
viśvarūpāya:
jāyamānāyato the one who appears as being born/manifesting
jāyamānāya:
namaḥsalutations
namaḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating a hymn of praise within the Purva-Bhaga context)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames the Linga as the sign of Shiva who transcends manifest/unmanifest categories, yet becomes perceptible for devotees—supporting Linga-puja as worship of the formless Pati through a sacred form.

Shiva is presented as beyond sat/asat and beyond vyakti (limited manifestation), the eternal causal ground even of Mahat, and simultaneously viśvarūpa—immanent as the cosmos while remaining transcendent.

The key practice is stuti and contemplative upāsanā: meditating on Shiva as Pati beyond tattvas (including Mahat), which aligns with Pashupata-oriented inner worship that loosens pasha (bondage) upon the pashu (soul).