Harihara Revelation and the Kurukshetra Tirtha Cycle: Sthanu in Vishnu and the Sanctification of Saptasarasvata
दारुणत्वमधार्मिक्यं नरकावहमुच्यते एतैश्च पापैः संयुक्तः प्रीणयेद् यदि शङ्करम्
dāruṇatvamadhārmikyaṃ narakāvahamucyate etaiśca pāpaiḥ saṃyuktaḥ prīṇayed yadi śaṅkaram
ความดุร้ายและอธรรมถูกกล่าวว่าเป็นเหตุให้ตกนรก และหากผู้ใดแม้ประกอบด้วยบาปเหล่านี้ ยังปรารถนาจะทำให้ศังกระ (พระศิวะ) พอพระทัย…
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The construction sets up a conditional: a person burdened with such sins may attempt to please Śiva, but the surrounding teaching typically stresses that devotion must be accompanied by ethical transformation; otherwise the ‘hell-bringing’ trajectory remains. The next verse (35.26) points to conquering residual sin through knowledge and discipline.
Śaṅkara (‘the beneficent’) highlights Śiva’s salvific capacity—he can purify and uplift—yet the text simultaneously warns against using worship as a cover for continued cruelty and adharmic life.
Pilgrimage and temple worship are repeatedly framed as most fruitful when paired with restraint (yama), truthfulness, and non-cruelty. This verse functions as a moral gatekeeping principle for sacred acts.