शिवतेजसः समुद्रे बालरूपप्रादुर्भावः (Śiva’s Tejas Manifesting as a Child in the Ocean)
सनत्कुमार उवाच । एवं वदति पाथोधौ स बालस्सागरात्मजः । ब्रह्माणमग्रहीत्कण्ठे विधुन्वंतं मुहुर्मुहुः
sanatkumāra uvāca | evaṃ vadati pāthodhau sa bālassāgarātmajaḥ | brahmāṇamagrahītkaṇṭhe vidhunvaṃtaṃ muhurmuhuḥ
Sanatkumāra nói: Khi Biển cả đang nói như thế, chàng thiếu niên—đứa con của đại dương—bỗng nắm lấy cổ Phạm Thiên Brahmā và lắc mạnh hết lần này đến lần khác, liên tiếp không ngừng.
Sanatkumara
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Bhairava
Sthala Purana: Not a Jyotirliṅga account; the violent seizure functions as a narrative eruption of ‘ugra’ energy, reminiscent of Bhairava-like disruption of cosmic decorum.
Role: destructive
It highlights that even exalted cosmic authorities like Brahmā can be forcibly checked when dharma and cosmic order are disturbed—pointing to the Shaiva Siddhānta emphasis that all finite powers remain subordinate to the Supreme Lord (Pati) and must act without ego.
Though the verse is a battle-narrative moment, its underlying message supports Saguna Shiva devotion: the devotee learns humility and reliance on the Supreme protector, whose manifest governance restores order when other deities are constrained by circumstance.
A practical takeaway is cultivating humility through japa of the Pañcākṣarī mantra ("Om Namaḥ Śivāya") and meditating on Shiva as the inner ruler (Pati) who steadies the mind when shaken by agitation, just as cosmic order is steadied in the Purāṇic narrative.