Harihara Non-Duality and the Revelation of Sadasiva to the Ganas
महापाशुपता नाम चक्रशूलधरास्तथा भैरवो विष्णुना सार्द्धमभेदेनार्चितो हि यै
mahāpāśupatā nāma cakraśūladharāstathā bhairavo viṣṇunā sārddhamabhedenārcito hi yai
At (dumating) yaong tinatawag na “Mahāpāśupata,” na may hawak na cakra at trisula. Si Bhairava, kasama ni Viṣṇu, ay tunay na sinamba nila bilang hindi magkaiba (iisang diwa).
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It is a deliberate syncretic emblem: cakra signals Viṣṇu’s sovereignty and protection, while śūla signals Śiva’s transformative power. Together they encode the Purāṇic claim that the supreme functions of preservation and dissolution are harmonized in the divine order.
Primarily devotionally and theologically: the worshippers revere Bhairava and Viṣṇu as non-separate in essence, a common Purāṇic strategy to reconcile sectarian devotion within a single sacred narrative.
Not directly. No tīrtha, river, mountain, or forest is named; the verse is doctrinal, emphasizing unity and the composition of divine hosts in the Andhaka episode.