भैरवावतारलीलावर्णनम् (Bhairava-avatāra-līlā-varṇanam) — “Narration of the Divine Play of Bhairava’s Descent”
अथायान्तं महाकालं त्रिनेत्रं सर्पकुण्डलम् । महादेवांशसम्भूतं पूर्णाकारं च भैरवम्
athāyāntaṃ mahākālaṃ trinetraṃ sarpakuṇḍalam | mahādevāṃśasambhūtaṃ pūrṇākāraṃ ca bhairavam
تب انہوں نے مہاکال کو آتے دیکھا—تین آنکھوں والا، سانپ کے کُنڈلوں سے مزین—مہادیو کے اَمش سے اُدبھوت، کامل روپ میں پرکاش بھَیرو۔
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Mahākāla
Jyotirlinga: Mahākāleśvara
Sthala Purana: Mahākāla is explicitly named; in Jyotirliṅga tradition, Mahākāleśvara manifests as the Lord of Time who protects devotees and subdues death/time through His presence at Ujjayinī.
Significance: Darśana is sought for victory over fear of death, time-bound suffering, and for protective grace; especially famed for kāla-śamana and śānti.
Type: stotra
Shakti Form: Kālī
Role: destructive
Offering: dhupa
Cosmic Event: kāla-tattva emphasis (Lord as Time), suggesting the metaphysical horizon of dissolution though not a stated pralaya
The verse reveals Shiva’s Saguna majesty as Mahākāla and Bhairava—Time-transcending Lordship joined with fierce protection—showing that the Supreme can manifest fully to uphold dharma and liberate devotees.
By describing a ‘pūrṇākāra’ manifestation arising from Mahādeva, it supports Saguna upāsanā: the same Shiva worshipped as the formless Linga can also be approached through a definite form like Bhairava for grace, protection, and inner transformation.
Meditate on Shiva as Trinetra Mahākāla and recite the Panchakshara (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) with steady awareness of Time’s impermanence; for devotional practice, Bhairava-smaraṇa with bhasma (Tripuṇḍra) and Rudrākṣa supports fearlessness and focus.