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Selections from Yogiyajnavalkya

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The composition date of Yoga Yajnavalkya is unclear. Prahlad Divanji, an Indologist and Sanskrit scholar, states that the text was composed between the second century BCE and fourth century CE, because Yoga Upanishads and Hatha Yoga texts contain verses from Yoga Yajnavalkya. [16][17] Divanji cites Tantra texts, Ayurveda tradition texts, and literature of Advaita Vedanta from the 4th century CE, which mention the Yoga Yajnavalkya, thereafter concluding that the text or some version of the Yoga Yajnavalkyatext must have been in existence by the 4th century CE.

The work, extremely ancient, contains core advaitic tenets. A short selection is available here:

https://www.mediafire.com/file/ahi7i1a2s2gioch/Quotes+from+Yogiyajnavalkya+New.pdf


A Kannada article on Kumara Vyasa

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Sri Kumara Vyasa, the author of a poetical work on Mahabharatha, lived a few centuries ago. There is a belief among some followers of the Madhva school that he was influenced by Sri Vyasa Tirtha. Sri G.R.Patil, Dharwad, has penned a short article in Kannada giving a number of references from Kumara Vyasa’s work to show that he was an Advaitin and a Hari-Hara abheda vaadin.  The article is available here for download:

http://www.mediafire.com/file/aecymg9usblvscs/KUMAARAVYASA%25281%2529.pdf/file

Was Chaitanya Mahaprabhu influenced by Madhva Philosophy?

‘ShaNmata’ is mentioned by Thyagaraja

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‘ShaNmata’ is mentioned by Thyagaraja

The famous Pancharatna kriti of Thyagaraja, ‘Endaro mahanubhaavulu..’, in one of its charaNams, mentions the term ‘ShaNmata’ with a prefix ‘shiva aadi’. The meaning can be read in this site: http://www.shivkumar.org/music/endaromahanubhavulu-new.htm
The six schools of devotional practice culminating in Para Brahman realization are: Saivam, Saaktam, Vaishnavam, Sauram, GaaNaapatyam and Kaumaaram. It is significant that this term ‘ShaNmatam’ is found in a text that is not related to Shankaracharya or Advaita. Thyagaraja, even though a great devotee of Sri Rama, was not a bigoted follower. That he was of a very broad vision is known from his many other compositions too. Here he says that those are exalted men who are endowed with the knowledge of the core scriptures including the Veda, Bhagavatam, Ramayana, Bh.Gita, etc. and the paths of bhakti which are devoted to Shiva, Shakti, Vishnu, Ganesha, Kumara and Surya. In his vision, if someone is opposed to this view is not a ‘mahaanubhaava’.
Charanam-9: These are the great men who have derived boundless happiness by gathering the ocean of knowledge contained in Bhagvatam, Ramayana, Geeta, Vedas, Shastras by pondering over the secrets of the six religions orders under the class Sauram and Koumaram, by understanding the mind of the countless devas, by living a full life through the joy derived from music based on bhava, raga and laya.]

Bhaagavatha: Bhaagavatham
Ramayana: Ramayana
Geetha adi: Bhagavadgeetha
Sruthi: Vedas
Sastra: Sastras
Puraana: Purana’s
Marmamula: secrets
Siva adi Shan mathamula: six schools of devotion
Ghudamulan: secrets
Muppadi mukkoti: 33 crores
Sura antharangamula: devatha’s minds
Bhaavambulan: meaning
Eringi: Knowing
Bhaava: Meaning
Raga:Raga
Laya adi: Laya
Sowkhyamu che: state of well being
Chirayuvul: long life
Kaligi:have
Niravadi: no gap
Sukhathmulai: happiness
Thyagaraja aapthulaina: Friends to Thyagaraja
Vaaru: They

चरणम् 9भागवत रामायण गीतादि श्रुति शास्त्र पुराणपुमर्ममुल शिवादि षण्मतमुल गूढमुलन मुप्पदिमुक्कोटि सुरान्तरङ्गमुल भावम्बुल नॆरिंगि भाव राग लयादि सौख्य-मुचे चिरायुवुल् गलिगि निरवधि सुखात्मुलैत्यागराजाप्तुलैन वार-

Thyagaraja’s attitude is found reflected in a galaxy of persons of the Sanatana Dharma. Madhusudana Saraswati’s verse in the Bh.Gita 15th chapter commentary:शैवाः सौराश्च गाणेशा वैष्णवाः शक्तिपूजकाः। भवन्ति यन्मयाः सर्वे सोहमस्मि परः शिवः।।3।
‘I am that Supreme Śiva which is what the Śaivas, Sauras, Gāṇeśas, Vaiśṇavas, Śāktas meditate upon.’
Annamācārya reflects in this song: http://karnatiklyrics.blogspot.in/2011/06/entha-matramuna..html
//The Vaishnavas worship you with reverence as Vishnu. The Vedic philosophers tell that you are the Supreme Consciousness. The Shaivas believe that you are Śiva & the Kapalikas praise you as Adibhairava. The Shakteyas consider you as the manifestation of the supreme power Shakti. People chant your praise in a number of ways. Ignorant people assume that you are insignificant.The wise recognize your infinite greatness.// [Iit is noteworthy that Sri Annamācārya excludes the vaiṣṇavas from Vedāntins, just as Śankara has excluded the Pāñcarātra/bhāgavata school from the Vedānta darśana in the BSB:
koluthuru mimu vaishnavulu, koorimitho vishnudani palukuduru mimu vaedaantulu, parabrahma anuchu
By ‘Vedāntins’ he obviously refers to Advaitins for they alone hold the Supreme Reality to be ‘Brahman’ beyond all names and forms. Those who hold the highest tattvam to be ‘Viṣṇu’ (the deity identified as Lakṣmipati, etc.) are not vedantins as per this composer. None other than a true Vedantin can compose a verse that gives that lofty message that finds correspondence with Madhusudana and Pushpadanta and several unknown authors.
Pushpadanta, in his Shivamahimna stotram, for which Madhusudana Saraswati’s Hari-Harapara commentary is available, says:
त्रयी साङ्ख्यं योगः पशुपतिमतं वैष्णवमिति
प्रभिन्ने प्रस्थाने परमिदमदः पथ्यमिति च।
रुचीनां वैचित्र्यादृजुकुटिल नानापथजुषां
नृणामेको गम्यस्त्वमसि पयसामर्णव इव॥ ७॥The different practices based on the three Vedas, SaMkhya, Yoga, Pashupata-mata, VaishhNava-mata etc . are but different paths (to reach to the Greatest Truth) and people on account of their different aptitude choose from them whatever they think best and deserved to be accepted . But as the sea is the final resting place for all types of streams , You are the only reaching place for all people whichever path,straight or zigzag, they may accept . (7)
The highly catholic view of Jayantha Bhatta, of the 9th Century, is very commendable. His another work ‘AagamaDambara’, a drama, is also full of such concepts. For the verse composed by him, in the era contemporaneous with Shankara and prior to Ramanuja, see image in the post here:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/bvparishat/ZWhU0NzwZ-4/qr7INZ5nBQAJ
Thus, we have the idea of worshiping any deity of one’s ishTa, preference, and attaining the Supreme, enshrined in the scriptural lore. It has been given expression to by innumerable Vedantins. Shankara’s Prapanchasara is one example.
warm regardssubrahmanian.v

A unique verse of Vachaspati Misra invoking five deities

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Here the invocation of various deities by Vachaspati Misra (841 CE) is given along with an explanatory gloss: The deities are: Shiva, Aditya, Ganapati, Gowri (non-different from Saraswati) and Vishnu. The five-fold deity invocation is in line with the Panchayatana puja method following by the non-vaishnavite vaidikas. If it is asked ‘What about Kartikeya, the inclusion of whom would make up for the six-fold deity method of the ShaNmata-s?’, the reply is Vachaspati Misra has included Subrahmanya in his invocation to the Bhamati: The word ‘Tilakaswami’ refers to Subrahmanya, Kartikeya.

From the above we come to know that the practice of worshiping many deities was in vogue among vaidika-s. The verse of Vachaspati Misra in the Tattvabindu shown above assumes great significance as it has been cited as an invocation by Jagadguru Sri Abhinava Vidyatirtha Mahaswaminah of Sringeri Peetham in an article He had penned on Shankara Bhagavatpada during his early days. The article is available in a compilation, in English translation in a book titled ‘Didactic Discourses’ published by the Sri Vidyatirtha Foundation, Chennai.

Om Tat Sat

Shiva, Vishnu and Devi – Sringeri

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(See image below)

The Padmapurana in the Bhagavatam 12 skandha mahatmyam says ‘he is a great Vaishnava who holds the three said above to be Brahman and does not see them as different.’
(See image below)

During abhisheka in Sringeri the Shiva sphatika Linga, a salagrama and Srichakra (red object seen on the plate in the image below) are kept together. This symbolises Shiva, Vishnu and Devi identity.

Vamshidhara, a commentator of the Bhagavatam, has cited the verse from the Padmapurana (see image below).

Sri Appayya Dikshitar in his Ratna Traya Pariksha has given evidence from several scriptural texts for the Parabrahman nature of the divine Trinity.

No photo description available.





No photo description available.

Sayanacharya refers to Prapanchasara as that of Shankaracharya

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Sayanacharya refers to Prapanchasara as that of Shankaracharya

In the Parasara maadhaviya, a commentary to the Parasara Smriti, Sayanacharya makes a mention of the Prapanchasara, widely believed to the a work of Shankaracharya:

P.74 of the pdf of the Parasara Smriti Vol.I part 1.

Sayanacharya says above: Hence alone has been said by the Acharya (he uses the plural instrumental case in respectful reference to Shankaracharya) in the Prapanchasara……The cited verse is indeed found in the Prapanchasara: 19.35.

Sayanacharya is admitted to be of the 14th Century CE. Before him, Sri Amalananda, the author of the famous Kalpataru (a commentary on the Bhamati of  Vachaspati Misara), in the 13th Centry CE has authenticated the Prapanchasara as that of Shankaracharya in the Kalpataru.

Much later, Sri Narayana Bhattatri, in his Narayaneeyam, has mentioned this work as that of Shankara, by alluding to it as ‘mantra saastra’.

We also have a work ‘nrsimha tapinyupanishat bhashya’, attributed to Shankaracharya, where the work Prapanchasara has been mentioned by name and cited several times.  

Also in the commentary to the Mahanarayanopanishat of the Taittiriya Aranyaka, Sayanacharya has cited several verses that depict certain deities, their description, etc. that are used as dhyana shloka for the upasana. These verses are found only in the Prapanchasara. He has not mentioned the name of the work or the epithet ‘Acharya’ to refer to the author, though.   

Om Tat Sat


The Trimurti-s appear and disappear in every kalpa – The Parasara Dharma Samhita

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The Trimurti-s appear and disappear in every kalpa – The Parasara Dharma Samhita

The Parasara Smriti, a dharmashastra work, is an ancient one. It says that the Trimurtis have origination and disappearance in each creation cycle. This is in perfect agreement with the Atharvashikha Upanishad which says: brahmaviShNurudrendrAste samprasUyante..[Brahma, Vishnu, Rudra and Indra are born..]

Sayanacharya (Madhavacharya) has commented on this text elaborately and the same is available in multiple volumes.

A post on the above topic is available for download here:

http://www.mediafire.com/file/h1tbgpe59rqzfvq/Trimurtis_perish_etc._Parashara_Maadhaviya.pdf/file


Selections from the Vrata KaanDa of Hemadri’s Chaturvarga Chintamani

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The ‘Vrata kaaNDa’ (section on vows and observances) of Hemadri’s (13th Century CE) ‘Chaturvarga Chintamani’ Vol.2, Part 1, contains hundreds of vrata-s that the author has found fit to be listed for the use of the followers of sanatana dharma.  A perusal of the list throws light on the practices of the vaidika-s of the author’s period and before. We can see that vaidika-s had no narrow views about the worshiping of various deities of the sanatana dharma. That shows that maintaining such narrow views as to ‘only certain deities are fit to be worshiped and not others’ is an unvedic one, not to the approval of Shankaracharya and his followers.  

A selection from the text of Hemadri is given in the file downloadable from the following link:http://www.mediafire.com/file/7ad9oldya531u70/Images_from_Chaturvarga_Chintamani_Vol_2.pdf/file

regards

A Ramanuja-‘scholar’ exhibits his ignorance of Advaita

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A Ramanuja-‘scholar’ exhibits his ignorance of Advaita

The author of an article, trying to pose himself as a well-read scholar, says about Advaita, Advaitic experience, etc:

(For the Tamil passages of the author see here: https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/advaitin/conversations/messages/71527
As per Advaita, after aparoksha jnana, the vyavaharika perceptible world will cease to appear to the Jnani. Why, for him even his body will not be perceptible. In such a situation what will he teach to whom? Advaita has prescribed an upasana of a deity for securing such (advaitic) knowledge. Advaitic Jnana is the meditating upon that deity and becoming that very deity itself. Since the meditation of that deity results in liberating jnana there is the need for that deity to give moksha.   
He says further:
     
(For the Tamil passages of the author see here: https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/advaitin/conversations/messages/71527
The teachings of Rishis in the Upanishads are all only doctrinal aspects of a particular subject. One cannot conclude that the one who teaches these doctrinal aspects and one who hears them have attained the experience that the doctrinal aspects talk about. Thus, if one teaches and another listens, it only means that both have not had the Advaitic experience. If the teacher gains the experience, for him the  hearer of the teachings ceases to exist. Similarly if the hearer gains the experience, for him the teacher ceases to exist. Therefore we cannot identify anyone as ‘these are the ones with advaitic experience.’ This is because the one who has had the Advaitic experience cannot directly perceive anyone in the world.  Even if others see him, since he cannot perceive others’ forms, the teaching is impossible (to be imparted). Just as the dream seen in sleep ceases to be upon waking, the perceived world disappears for the one who has had the aparoksha jnana. Even though others can see him, how is one to prove that he has had the direct realization? Hence none who has had the experience (of advaita) can ever impart that knowledge to anyone. One can at best say ‘this person is a knower of the tenets of advaita.’
The author’s above complete wrong understanding of Advaita is laughable.The above ‘understanding’ about the Advaitic realization, the state of the realized person, etc. of the ‘scholar’ may be assessed in the light of the following just three (out of dozens of similar) passages from Shankara’s bhashya:

The author is not aware that Advaita admits Jivanmukti (liberation while being alive). In several places across the prasthana traya bhashya, Shankara has given unmistakable pronouncements about the aparoksha anubhava (not merely a knowledge of advaitic tenets, which the author has said as ‘advaita koTpaaDu’, which is only paroksha jnana in advaita. Only aparoksha anubhava will result in mukti in advaita. Here are just three samples from Shankara’s bhashya which prove that the author has not understood anything correctly about Advaita:

Brahmasutra Bhashyam 4.1.15:

अपि च नैवात्र विवदितव्यम् — ब्रह्मविदा कञ्चित्कालं शरीरं ध्रियते न वा ध्रियत इति । कथं हि एकस्य स्वहृदयप्रत्ययं ब्रह्मवेदनं देहधारणं च अपरेण प्रतिक्षेप्तुं शक्येत ? श्रुतिस्मृतिषु च स्थितप्रज्ञलक्षणनिर्देशेन एतदेव निरुच्यते ।

Here Shankara says: A Jnani will have the aparoksha anubhava of (1) being Brahman and (2) at the same time be in a body too. No one can deny this, continues Shankara, ‘This alone is spoken of as Sthitaprajna lakshana in the shruti and smritis.’

Thus, there is evidence in Shankara’s own words for the factual possibility of aparoksha anubhava for the Advaitin. And naturally he will be living in the world and interacting with it. Surely only if he can see others, other objects, can he interact.

Bhagavadgita bhashyam 4.34:

तद्विद्धि प्रणिपातेन परिप्रश्नेन सेवया ।

उपदेक्ष्यन्ति ते ज्ञानं ज्ञानिनस्तत्त्वदर्शिनः ॥ ३४ ॥

तत् विद्धि विजानीहि येन विधिना प्राप्यते इति । आचार्यान् अभिगम्य, प्रणिपातेन प्रकर्षेण नीचैः पतनं प्रणिपातः दीर्घनमस्कारः तेन, ‘कथं बन्धः ? कथं मोक्षः ? का विद्या ? का चाविद्या ? ’ इति परिप्रश्नेन, सेवया गुरुशुश्रूषया एवमादिना । प्रश्रयेण आवर्जिता आचार्या उपदेक्ष्यन्ति कथयिष्यन्ति ते ज्ञानं यथोक्तविशेषणं ज्ञानिनः । ज्ञानवन्तोऽपि केचित् यथावत् तत्त्वदर्शनशीलाः, अपरे न ; अतो विशिनष्टि तत्त्वदर्शिनः इति । ये सम्यग्दर्शिनः तैः उपदिष्टं ज्ञानं कार्यक्षमं भवति नेतरत् इति भगवतो मतम् ॥ ३४ ॥

In the above bhashyam Shankara emphasizes who are ‘Tattva darshi-s’ – they are not merely endowed with jnana (paroksha jnana, the knowledge of the tenets of Advaita, as the ‘scholar’ has claimed above) but also ‘tattva darshana shiilaaH’ which means aparoksha jnani-s who have the ‘aham brahma asmi’ anubhava. Only they can teach the tattva successfully, Shankara emphasizes.

This bhashya too demolishes the ill-conceived notion of the Tamil author that ‘someone having the Advaitic anubhava won’t be able to teach others because he can’t see others’ 🙂  That such an idea is laughable can be readily seen from the Lord’s explicit teaching and the use of the adjective ‘tattva darshi’ over and above the epithet ‘jnani’ and Shankara’s commentary.

Bhagavadgita bhashyam 4.20:

यस्तु प्रारब्धकर्मा सन् उत्तरकालमुत्पन्नात्मसम्यग्दर्शनः स्यात् , सः सर्वकर्मणि प्रयोजनमपश्यन् ससाधनं कर्म परित्यजत्येव । सः कुतश्चित् निमित्तात् कर्मपरित्यागासम्भवे सति कर्मणि तत्फले च सङ्गरहिततया स्वप्रयोजनाभावात् लोकसङ्ग्रहार्थं पूर्ववत् कर्मणि प्रवृत्तोऽपि नैव किञ्चित् करोति, ज्ञानाग्निदग्धकर्मत्वात् तदीयं कर्म अकर्मैव सम्पद्यते इत्येतमर्थं दर्शयिष्यन् आह —

त्यक्त्वा कर्मफलासङ्गं नित्यतृप्तो निराश्रयः ।

कर्मण्यभिप्रवृत्तोऽपि नैव किञ्चित्करोति सः ॥ २० ॥

त्यक्त्वा कर्मसु अभिमानं फलासङ्गं च यथोक्तेन ज्ञानेन नित्यतृप्तः निराकाङ्क्षो विषयेषु इत्यर्थः । निराश्रयः आश्रयरहितः, आश्रयो नाम यत् आश्रित्य पुरुषार्थं सिसाधयिषति, दृष्टादृष्टेष्टफलसाधनाश्रयरहित इत्यर्थः । विदुषा क्रियमाणं कर्म परमार्थतोऽकर्मैव, तस्य निष्क्रियात्मदर्शनसम्पन्नत्वात् । तेन एवंभूतेन स्वप्रयोजनाभावात् ससाधनं कर्म परित्यक्तव्यमेव इति प्राप्ते, ततः निर्गमासम्भवात् लोकसङ्ग्रहचिकीर्षया शिष्टविगर्हणापरिजिहीर्षया वा पूर्ववत् कर्मणि अभिप्रवृत्तोऽपि निष्क्रियात्मदर्शनसम्पन्नत्वात् नैव किञ्चित् करोति सः ॥ २० ॥

The gist of the above is: the Aparoksha Jnani will have no ‘I am the doer’ bhaava, but even though he (the body mind apparatus) is engaged in hectic activity, ‘abhi’ prefix for ‘pravrutti’ shows that, ‘he’ is really not doing anything. Naturally, for being engaged in karma, he should be able to see other people, objects, etc. Shankara says he will be doing that for the sake of ‘loka sangraha’, emancipation of the people. If he cannot see the loka, as contended by the author of the Tamil article, how can be do loka sangraha?

The other mistaken idea of the author

//Advaita has prescribed an upasana of a deity for securing such (advaitic) knowledge. Advaitic Jnana is the meditating upon that deity and becoming that very deity itself. Since the meditation of that deity results in liberating jnana there is the need for that deity to give moksha.//

is also refuted by Shankara’s words:

Nowhere in the Advaita bhashyas has Shankara said that a deity is to be meditated upon for realization of the Advaitic Truth. A deity-meditation is not precluded for it serves the purpose of chitta shuddhi. However, the one to be meditated, nididhyasanam, is the nirguna Brahman-Atman which alone results in the aparoksha advaita jnanam. In fact the proposition of the Tamil author is directly refuted by Shankara’s words:

In Kenopanishad pada bhashyam, introducing the crucial mantra 1.5, Shankara makes a purvapaksha:

 आत्मा हि नामाधिकृतः कर्मण्युपासने च संसारी कर्मोपासनं वा साधनमनुष्ठाय ब्रह्मादिदेवान्स्वर्गं वा प्राप्तुमिच्छति । तत्तस्मादन्य उपास्यो विष्णुरीश्वर इन्द्रः प्राणो वा ब्रह्म भवितुमर्हति, न त्वात्मा ; लोकप्रत्ययविरोधात् । यथान्ये तार्किका ईश्वरादन्य आत्मेत्याचक्षते, तथा कर्मिणोऽमुं यजामुं यजेत्यन्या एव देवता उपासते । तस्माद्युक्तं यद्विदितमुपास्यं तद्ब्रह्म भवेत् , ततोऽन्य उपासक इति ।
Atma being a samsari, indeed is someone who is fit to perform karma or upasana and wishes to attain to the state of gods or heaven. Therefore the upaasya is different such as Vishnu, Ishwara, Indra or Prana and could be Brahman but not the Atma who is only upasaka, since holding the upasaka and upasya as non-different contradicts what practice prevails in the world. Just as others, the tarkikas hold the Atma to be different from Ishwara and just as Mimasakas also meditate/propitiate devatas by sacrifices, holding the devata to be different from the upasaka/sacrificer, that which is known as an object is upasaya can be Brahman but never the upasaka can be Brahman.
Replying to the purvapaksha the Vedantin says this mantra 1.5 of the Kenopanishat is to remove such a misconception of difference between upasaka and upasya and teaches that one should realize Brahman as oneself and not as someone else, upasya.  In the course of the discussion Shankara does not deny the idea of multiple gods such as Vishnu and Ishwara, even Prana, Indra, etc. being meditated as Brahman. In other words, a deity can be meditated only as different from oneself and such a meditation can never culminate in the Advaitic aparoksha jnanam as conjectured by the Tamil author.

Thus, the author’s complete ignorance of the fundamental tenets of Advaita has resulted in his expressing totally incorrect ideas about Advaita. He is not only ignorant but also propagating that ignorance to others who are his gullible followers who fall for his ‘knowledge’ and end up imbibing that ignorance of their mentor. ‘andhenaiva neeyamaanaa yathaa andhaah’, the blind leading the blind.

[The article from where the Tamil passages are sourced was shared with me over a month ago by a friend who is an acquaintance of the author of the Tamil article.]  

A Vedantin’s commentary to the Shiva Sahasra Nama – a short selection

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Here is an image from NilakanTha’s commentary to the Shiva Sahasra Nama of the Mahabharata. Just two names are highlighted: वृक्षकर्णस्थितिः  and विष्णुप्रसादितः.  The first cited name has a fund of Vedantic import. It is about the tree of samsara that keeps thriving in the face of continued ignorance. If one gets the liberating knowledge, the samsara tree ceases. The one who keeps the tree thriving and the one who puts an end to it is the same power: Shiva. The second name is recalling the incident where Vishnu worshiped Shiva and pleased the latter and obtained the Chakra. This incident is alluded to in the Harivamsha too.

In the left part of the image is the commentary of NilakanTha for the first cited name. He links the eight-fold names of Shiva given in the Shivapuranam with etymology:

शिवो महेश्वरश्चैव रुद्रो विष्णुः पितामहः ॥ ७.१,३२.२३
संसारवैद्यः सर्वज्ञः परमात्मेति मुख्यतः ॥ ७.१,३२.२३
नामाष्टकमिदं मुख्यं शिवस्य प्रतिपादकम् ॥ ७.१,३२.२४

After citing the above, the commentator goes on to say: Since Vishnu and Pitamaha (Brahmaa) are also non-different from Shiva, these have been included in the above bunch of eight names that determine the nature, tattva, of Shiva. The above last line of the Shivapuranam also confirms that these names in this Puranam are pertaining to Shiva alone. Shankara in the Vishnu Sahasra Nama (VSN) Bhashya has cited the verse:

रुद्दुःखं दुःखहेतुर्वा तद्रावयति नः प्रभुः ॥ ७.१,३२.३६
रुद्र इत्युच्यते सद्भिः शिवः परमकारणम् ॥ ७.१,३२.३६

from the above chapter of the Shivapuranam while commenting on the name ‘Rudra’ occurring in the VSN. NilakanTha further says: The names of Vishnu and those of Shiva are applicable to One entity only and cites the verse, from the Harivamsha:

नामानि तव गोविन्द यानि लोके महान्ति च |

तान्येव मम नामानि नात्र कार्या विचरणा ||

Whatever names you have oh Govinda, they are my names only without doubt.

These are the words of Maheshwara in Harivamsa. This means that all the names of Vishnu including Narayana may be applied to Shiva as well.
Shankaracharya, in his commentary to the Vishnu Sahasra Nama, introductory part, has cited the above verse. At the end of his citing several verses of this genre Shankara remarks: इत्यादिवाक्यानि एकत्वप्रतिपादकानि – such scriptural statements have for their purport oneness.
NilakanTha, with pain, says: Those heretics who imagine a difference between Shiva and Vishnu, shall be doomed. Says the Sutasamhita (he cites):
ब्रह्माणं केशवं विष्णुं भेदभावेन मोहिताः | पश्यन्त्येकं न जानन्ति पाषण्डोपहता जनाः | [Those who, out of delusion, look upon the Trimurti-s as different and not as one, are horrible heretics.]
Hence alone, he says, the names such as ‘माता, धाता, पितामहः, रुद्रः, बहुशिराः, बभ्रुः..etc. names of Brahma and Rudra are seen among Vishnu’s names too. Similarly names such as ‘महादेवोऽव्ययो हरिः गणनाथः प्रजापतिः where Vishnu and Brahmaa are there, are seen included in Shiva’s names. Those who hold the erroneous view ‘The names of one deity found in the other deity’s list of names are to be seen as primary in the first deity’s list and secondary in the other deity’s list’ is refuted by the Shiva purana and the Skanda purana (suta samhita) citations above and thus needs to be discarded.
NilakanTha cites vedic mantras in support of the Vedantic view that One Supreme alone is called by various names: यो देवानां नामधा एक एव, नामानि सर्वाणि यमाविशन्ति, एकं सत् विप्रा: बहुधा वदन्ति, अग्निं यमं मातरिश्वामाहुः .. and concludes that those who hold the erroneous view stated above are outside the pale of Veda and therefore have to be rejected. He refers the reader to his extensive discourse on this topic in his introductory commentary to the Adi Parvan of the Mahabharata.
That Nilakantha is an advaitin is known from his commentary to the Bhagavadgita which is printed along with the other advaitic commentaries.
Om Tat Sat

 

Prapanchasara: Shankara alludes to the ‘Sharabha-Shiva’ episode from the Kalikapurana

The Advaita Vasudeva Tattva

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The Advaita Vasudeva Tattva

इन्द्रियाणि मनो बुद्धिः सत्त्वं तेजो बलं धृतिः। वासुदेवात्मकान्याहुः क्षेत्रं क्षेत्रज्ञ एव च।१३६।।

[The jiva (observer), all that is observed, sense (and motor) organs, manas, intellect, body, strength, energy and courage are all verily Vasudeva.]
It is significant that the 13th chapter of the Bh.Gita lists what constitutes ‘kshetram’ (observed) and what is the kshetrajna, the observer jiva.
In the above verse that occurs at the end of the Vishnu sahasra nama, we have the special statement that both the kshetra and the kshetrajna are none other than Vasudeva. In other words, the ‘atma’ of the kshetram (prapancha) and the kshetrajna (jiva) is ‘Vasudeva’.
This takes us to the other crucial vedic statement: स य एषोऽणिमैतदात्म्यमिदꣳ सर्वं तत्सत्यꣳ स आत्मा तत्त्वमसि श्वेतकेतो of the Chandogya 6th chapter.
This mantra says: The most subtle Tattva is the Atma of this entire observed universe (idam). That is the Truth, abaadhitam,   तदेव सदाख्यं कारणं सत्यं परमार्थसत् । अतः स एव आत्मा जगतः प्रत्यक्स्वरूपं सतत्त्वं याथात्म्यम् That Sat, Existence, is the Cause of the world and hence that is the Atma and therefore the Truth, essence, of the world. And the mantra says, you, the jiva, O Shvetaketu, are That tattva which is the Atma of the world.
So, we have in the Upanishad too, the idea that Brahman/Sat is the Atma of the world (idam, kshetram) and the jiva (aham, kshetrajna).
The idea contained in the above two sources, the verse of the Vishnu Sahasra Nama and the Chandogya Mahavakya, is encapsulated beautifully in these words of Yama addressed to his deputies in the Vishnu Puranam:
 सकलमिदमहं च वासुदेवः परमपुमान्परमेश्वरः स एकः । इति मतिर(च)मला भवत्यनन्ते हृदयगते व्रज तान्विहाय दूरात्  || 3.7.32
[All this, and I, are verily Vasudeva who is the Supreme Brahman, the Supreme Lord, who is One. Whoever has such an unshakable conviction with regard to the Infinite Brahman, O Deputies, leave him alone. He is not someone who is fit to die and be born again.]
Shankara has cited this verse in the VSN bhashyam. .
Thus, this Vasudeva is not a deity, devataa, but a Tattva, the Nirguna Brahman. This Tattvam alone appears as the jiva, jagat and the bhoga that occurs as an interaction between the jiva and the jagat. All the instruments at the disposal of the jiva in securing this bhoga (and apavarga, moksha, sadhana), is also kshetram and therefore Vasudeva. The pramaatru, jiva, the observer, is also Vasudeva. Thus, the drshya and drk/drashTaa are verily one Tattvam. Vedanta Jnana is none other than realizing ‘I am Vasudeva’. The equivalent of this is ‘ShivaH kevalo’ham’ as stated by Shankara in the refrain for the Dashashloki which has been elaborately commented upon by Madhusudana Saraswati who also at the beginning of the Siddhanta Bindu acknowledges this as a work of Shankara.
Thus the Advaita Vasudeva Tattva is stated by Veda Vyasa in the Mahabharata (cited above), the Vishnu Puranam on the basis of the Chandogya Upanishad.
Om Tat Sat

Excerpts from the ‘lost’ kaaThaka recension

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The ‘lost’ kAThaka shaakhaa has yielded a set of srauta and grihya sutras. An excerpt from these and other texts that remain only as quotations in other works reveals to us that from the most ancient times vaidikas worshiped both Vishnu and Shiva through various karma-s. We also get a glimpse of the status of Gayathri, as the Shakti worshiped by the Trimurti-s.

The file can be downloaded from here:

http://www.mediafire.com/file/7tlt2s6f6jvztdz/Excerpt_from_Katha_samkalana.pdf/file

regards

subrahmanian.v

Hari-Hara abheda: Tulasi Das one with Veda Vyasa

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Hari-Hara abheda: Tulasi Das one with Veda Vyasa

In the Ramacharita Manas of Goswami Tulsi Das occurs this verse:

http://tinyurl.com/yy58fbva

शंकर प्रिय मम द्रोही,शिव द्रोही मम दास.
ते नर करहिं कल्प भर, घोर नरक मंह वास. [रामचरित मानस – लंकाकांड – दोहा २].

Meaning of the above ‘doha’ is:
राम जी के सागर पर सेतु बनाने से पहले रामजी कहते हैं की
जो राम भक्त हैं और शिव का द्रोह करते हैं अथवा शिव भक्त हैं राम का द्रोह करते हैं ऐसे नर कल्प भर घोर नरक में वास करते हैं.

Lord Ram says that the person, who is my devotee but against Shiva (regarding him inferior) or is a Shiva devotee and is against me (regarding me inferior), will dwell in hell forever.

These words of Tulasi Das reflect the several verses of Veda Vyasa which have been cited by Shankara in the Vishnu Shasra nama bhashyam:
Bhaviṣyottara purāṇa :

Maheśvara (Śiva) says:

विष्णोरन्यं तु पश्यन्ति ये मां ब्रह्माणमेव वा ।

कुतर्कमतयो मूढाः पच्यन्ते नरकेष्वधः ॥

[Those fools who, devoid of proper thinking, consider Me and Brahmā as different from Viṣṇu, will be baked in the lowly hells.] This idea is reflected in a famous Tamil saying: ariyum aranum onnu, ariyadavar vaayile mannu.

ये च मूढा दुरात्मानो भिन्नं पश्यन्ति मां हरेः ।

ब्रह्माणं च ततस्तस्माद् ब्रह्महत्यासमं त्वघम् ॥

[Those fools, wicked ones, by seeing Me and Brahmā as different from Hari are committing the heinous sin of brahmahatyā.]

One can recall a similar verse in the Śrīmadbhāgavatam (Dakṣayajña section) as said by Viṣṇu: such jiva-s will not attain liberation.

Harivamṣa 3.88. 60, 61, 62 which are addressed by Maheśwara during the Kailāsa yātra episode:

नामानि तव गोविन्द यानि लोके महान्ति च ।

तान्येव मम नामानि नात्र कार्या विचारणा ॥

[O Govinda, your esteemed names alone are mine as well; no doubt need to be had in this regard] There Veda Vyasa, through Shiva, conveys that all the names of Viṣṇu, including the name ‘Nārāyaṇa’ are that of Śiva. Thus the thousand names of Viṣṇu are also those of Śiva since there is no difference in name and sense between the pair Hari and Hara.

त्वदुपासा जगन्नाथ सैवास्तु मम गोपते ।

यश्च त्वां द्वेष्टि भो देव स मां द्वेष्टि न संशयः ॥

[The worship/meditation of You, O Gopati, let that be meditation on me too. He who hates you O Deva, hates me too, undoubtedly.]

Harivamśa verses, spoken by Maheśvara (Śiva) to Vishnu:

अहं त्वं सर्वग देव त्वमेवाहं जनार्दन ।

आवयोरन्तरं नास्ति शब्दैरर्थैर्जगत्त्रये ॥ (3.88.60)

[O, the all-pervading one, I am Thee, and Thou are me alone. There is no difference between the two of us either by word or meaning in all the three worlds.]

Thus we see that only Vedantins are capable of composing and citing verses of this genre.

Om Tat Sat


Some interesting excerpts from Uttara KaanDa of Ramayana  

Bhasma dharana and Linga archana – Mahabharata

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Bhasma dharana and Linga archana – Mahabharata

In the Anushasanika Parva 13, in chapter 247 there is a conversation between Shiva and Parvati. It is a small chapter where the Pashupata Yoga is described. Shiva says with respect to Bhasma:

रक्षार्थं मङ्गलार्थं च पवित्रार्थं च भामिनि।
लिङ्गार्थं चैव भक्तानां भस्म दत्तं मया पुरा॥ 13-247-14 (91207)
तेन संदिग्धसर्वाङ्गा भस्मना ब्रह्मचारिणः।
जटिला मुण्डिता वाऽपि नानाकारशिखण्डिनः॥ 13-247-15

[NilakanTha has cited the first verse above in his commentary to the Siva Sahasra Nama (‘bhasmagopta’, with a variation: laanChanaartham instead of lingaartham) of the Mahabharata]

[For the sake of protection, auspiciousness, purity, O beloved, for identity (mark), of the devotees, in the yore the bhasma was ordained by Me. Applying it all over their bodies (in the prescribed manner), brahmacharins, vanaprasthas or sannyasins (of tonsured head) and those sporting a variety of tufts….

स्थापितं त्रिषु लोकेषु शिवलिङ्गं मया मम।
नमस्कारेण वा तस्य मुच्यन्ते सर्वकिल्बिषैः॥ 13-247-20..

[In all the three worlds I have consecrated the Shiva Linga. Even by prostrating to it one is freed of all demerits.]
And a detailed method of offering worship to the Shiva Linga is stated.

एतत्ते सर्वमाख्यातं योगं पाशुपतं महत्।

[I have rendered the exalted Pashupata Yoga in its complete form, O Devi.]

The above verses are taken from the Kumbhakonam edition:

https://sanskritdocuments.org/…/mb…/mahabharata-k-13-sa.html

//This e-text is based on the `Southern Recension’ of the Mahābhārata, edited by Krishnacharya 1906–1914. Prof. Shrinivasa Varakhedi worked on this with the support of his research team members, Prof. K. V. Ramakrishnamacharyulu, Prof. Amba Kulakarni, Prof. Prahladachar, members of MSP Bangalore and many others. Dr. Dominik Wujastyk converted the files to utf-8 IAST encoding and Patrick Mc Allister converted them into a single XML file for the SARIT project in 2012.//

मद्भक्ता न विनश्यन्ति मद्भक्ता वीतकल्मषाः।
मद्भक्ताः सर्वलोकेषु पूजनीया विशेषतः॥ 13-247-35 (91228)
मद्द्वेषिणश्चि ये मर्त्या मद्भक्तद्वेषिणश्च वा।
यान्ति ते नरकं घोरमिष्ट्वा क्रतुशतैरपि॥ 13-247-36 (91229)

Shiva says: My devotees never perish; My devotees are free of taints. My devotees are worthy of especial worship in all the worlds. Those people who hate me or my devotees will attain to horrible hell even if they have performed hundreds of vedic yajnas.

warm regards

An Advaita-friendly selection from NilakanTha’s commentary to the SSS

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An Advaita-friendly selection from NilakanTha’s commentary to the SSS
In this short selection from NilakanTha’s commentary to the Shiva Sahasra Nama of the Mahabharata we get a glimpse of several seimnal Vedantic concepts along with a treat of Hari-Hara abheda.  Citations from Shankara’s bhashyam is also provided in a few places. The file can be downloaded at:
warm regards

Siva-Rama darshanam on Ramanavami

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Siva-Rama darshanam on Ramanavami
In the Aranyaka Parva of the Mahabharata there is a rendering of the Ramayana by Marakandeya. In a verse describing Rama chasing the golden deer (Maareecha), to take on him, the comparison of Rudra chasing the deer that is a disguise of Brahma:
https://sanskritdocuments.org/mirrors/mahabharata/unic/mbh03_sa.html?fbclid=IwAR1ll2WKfVZeSaVKKwZoBeZ2R9B20wdbRLHhClzZWZcbKA_k7N5RJ9rbRTQ

स धन्वी बद्धतूणीरः खड्गगोधाङ्गुलित्रवान् | 

अन्वधावन्मृगं रामो रुद्रस्तारामृगं यथा ||१९||
The story behind the ‘Brahmaa-deer’ is:
  “How Mrigasira became a constellation”
“Brahma (the Creator) had a daughter who was very beautiful and to whom he was sexually attracted.  His daughter sensed his attraction so she took the form of a deer and ran away.  Brahma then took the form of a stag and chased her across the heavens.  When Rudra (aka Shiva) found out what was happening he cut off the head of the stag in order to prevent the incestuous relationship from taking place.  The stag’s head became the nakshatra of Mrigashira”.
There are many instances/verses in the Valmiki Ramayanam too where the valor of Rama is compared with that of Rudra.
There are fine Shiva-stutis in this chapter of the Mahabharata such as –
रुद्रं सत्कर्मभिर्मर्त्याः पूजयन्तीह दैवतम् | शिवमित्येव यं प्राहुरीशं रुद्रं पिनाकिनम् ||२४|| भावैस्तु विविधाकारैः पूजयन्ति महेश्वरम् ||२४||
[People, by their noble deeds worship Rudra who is
known by the name Shivam. By a variety of
sentiments people worship Him.]
Veda Vyasa has immortalized the Shiva-Vishnu inseparable identity by innumerable
instances/verses, one most popular of these being:
रुद्रो नारायणश्चैव सत्त्वमेकं द्विधा कृतम्।
लोके चरति कौन्तेय व्यक्तिस्थं सर्वकर्मसु।। 12-350-27a 12-350-27b.
[Rudra and Narayana are only two manifestations of One Principle…….]
Sridhara Swamin captures the purport of the Veda thus:
माधवोमाधवावीशौ सर्वसिद्धिविधायिनौ। वन्दे परस्परात्मानौ परस्परनुतिप्रियौ॥

I bow to Mādhava and Umādhava (Shiva) who are both ‘Isha-s’ Supreme Lords. They are capable of bestowing all accomplishments (to their devotees). They are both the selves of each other and both love to engage in the stuti of each other.

Shankara, after citing several such verses from Veda Vyasa’s works in the commentary to the Vishnu Sahasra nama concludes:  इत्यादिवाक्यानि एकत्वप्रतिपादकानि – these statements are establishing the unity, ekatva, of all beings including the gods Shiva-Vishnu and Trimurtis.

Om Tat Sat

 

A short selection from the Manasollasa of Someshwara III

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A short selection from the Manasollasa of Someshwara III

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manasollasa

//The Mānasollāsa, also known as Abhilashitartha Chintamani, is an early 12th-century Sanskrit text composed by the Kalyani Chalukya king Someshvara III, who ruled in present-day South India. It is an encyclopedic work covering topics such as polity, governance, ethics, economics, astronomy, astrology, rhetoric, veterinary medicine, horticulture, perfumes, food, architecture, sports, painting, poetry and music. The text is a valuable source of socio-cultural information on 11th- and 12th-century India.//

Excerpts from this book covering the deities worshiped at that time are collected and presented here:

http://www.mediafire.com/file/2o8o13wfoch4qak/A_short_selection_from_the_Manasollasa_of_Someshwara_III.pdf/file

Om Tat Sat

 

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