वीरभद्र-भैरव-आह्वानम् — Invocation of Vīrabhadra/Bhairava for Cosmic Reabsorption
विस्मृतिः किं तदंशेन दंष्ट्रोत्पातनपीडितम् । वाराहविघ्नहस्तेऽद्य याक्रोशन्तारकारिणा
vismṛtiḥ kiṃ tadaṃśena daṃṣṭrotpātanapīḍitam | vārāhavighnahaste'dya yākrośantārakāriṇā
他又怎会有遗忘与疏忽?仅凭其威力之一分,便能摧碎因拔起獠牙而生的剧苦。今日,正是那只解除野猪(婆罗诃)之障的手,化为救度者,渡越一切哀号求救之人。
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
Sthala Purana: Not a Jyotirliṅga origin; the verse praises salvific agency—‘tārakāriṇā’—as the Lord who ferries devotees across distress, consistent with Śiva as liberator.
Significance: Devotional takeaway: calling upon Śiva as Tāraka (deliverer) removes obstacles and carries the bound soul across saṃsāra—core Siddhānta emphasis on anugraha.
Role: liberating
Offering: pushpa
The verse praises Shiva’s unfailing attentiveness and saving power: even a fraction of his śakti removes intense suffering and turns distress into deliverance, affirming Shiva as Pati (the Lord) who protects the bound soul (paśu) and leads it toward liberation.
It highlights Saguna Shiva’s compassionate, active grace—removing obstacles and rescuing devotees who call out. In Linga-worship, this same grace is approached through devotion, mantra, and offering, trusting that Shiva’s presence is immediately protective and liberating.
A practical takeaway is to take refuge through japa of the Panchakshara (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) and prayer for obstacle-removal and inner steadiness; this aligns with Shaiva practice of invoking Shiva as Tāraka during fear, suffering, and life-transitions.