शुक्रोत्पत्तिः तथा महेश्वरदर्शनम् (Śukra’s Emergence and the Vision of Maheśvara)
सत्त्वं रजस्तमोधर्ममधर्मं वासवानुजम् । सत्यं त्वसत्यं सद्रूपमसद्रूपमहेतुकम्
sattvaṃ rajastamodharmamadharmaṃ vāsavānujam | satyaṃ tvasatyaṃ sadrūpamasadrūpamahetukam
Siya ang mismong simulain ng sattva, rajas, at tamas; Siya’y tinatawag na dharma at adharma, at maging nakababatang kapatid ni Indra. Siya ang Katotohanan, ngunit lampas sa pagdakma ng kasinungalingan; Siya ang tunay na anyo at gayundin ang wari’y di-tunay—ang Walang Sanhi, na nauuna sa lahat ng sanhi.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya, continuing the Yuddhakhaṇḍa discourse)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Jyotirlinga: Viśvanātha
Sthala Purana: As Viśvanātha, Śiva is ‘lord of the universe’—immanent in guṇas (sattva-rajas-tamas) and yet ahetuka (causeless), the ground of all causality; Kāśī is famed as the place where this lord grants liberation beyond dharma/adharma dualities.
Significance: Jñāna-vairāgya and mokṣa-prāpti; the ‘taraka’ grace of Śiva that carries the soul beyond guṇa and karma.
Type: stotra
Role: teaching
The verse presents the Supreme as transcending opposites: He pervades the three guṇas and even the moral polarity of dharma/adharma, showing that Shiva as Pati is beyond limited categories while still governing them for cosmic order and liberation.
By stating both ‘real form’ and ‘unreal appearance,’ it supports Linga worship as a Saguna support (ālambana) for devotees, while affirming that Shiva’s highest nature is beyond form and conceptual extremes—Nirguna, yet graciously accessible.
A practical takeaway is guṇa-śuddhi through japa of the Panchākṣarī (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) with vibhūti (Tripuṇḍra) and steady meditation on Shiva as the witness beyond sattva-rajas-tamas, cultivating detachment and clarity.