Siva Tattwa

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Siva Tattwa  

 




 ÇIVA-TATTVA LORD ÇIVA’S HIGHEST BENEDICTION
Preface
Lord Çiva is manifest from the Supreme Lord’s own divine desire. An
understanding of çiva-tattva (the principle of Çiva) is therefore essential in
realizing the deep purpose behind human life and its relationships. Lord Çiva is
a personality of many forms and names, such as Çaìkara, Çambhu and Maheça.
He is situated eternally in his original form as Gopéçvara, and in that form he
guards the doorway to that which matters most – our transcendental life. By his
own selfless dedication, this gentle and mysterious figure patiently guides those who
traverse the path to the Absolute, assuring them safe passage through all the stages
of devotion.
In this book Çiva-Tattva, Çréla Bhaktivedänta Näräyaëa Mahäräja brilliantly
clarifies the holy Hindu trinity: Brahmä, Viñëu and Çiva. Empowered by his spiritual
masters in the disciplic succession of the Gauòéya Vaiñëava tradition, he reveals the
conclusive truth (tattva) of Lord Çiva’s original position and gives us a look into his
endearing and affectionate nature.
The many intriguing historical narrations herein, all from authoritative
Vedic literatures, are interwoven with conclusive philosophy. In this way,
Çiva-Tattva reveals the beautiful harmony in Lord Çiva’s apparently contradictory
qualities. He is the destroyer and simultaneously the ingredient cause of creation. He is
the predominating deity of the mode of ignorance and simutaneously the reservoir of
absolute knowledge. He is the clever cheater and at the same time the giver of mercy.
His associates are ghosts, hobgoblins and witches, and at the same time he associates
with the most exalted demigods and sages, and even God Himself.
The profound topic of çiva-tattva is so vast that this work could have included
entire chapters on each of Lord Çiva’s glories, pastimes and manifestations. The
intention of this edition, however, is to inspire the reader with its essence, and to
awaken interest in the evolution of consciousness.
Çiva-Tattva opens with the history of a special mission, originally told in Çréla
Sanätana Gosvämé’s epic, Çré Båhad-bhägavatämåta. The aim of this mission was to
establish in the world the ultimate goal of all yogic practices, prema-bhakti. In a
heart-to-heart conversation with the sage Närada Muni, Lord Çiva brings to light
the qualifications of a genuine Vaiñëava or devotee of the Supreme Personality of
Godhead. Setting the scene for this divine conversation, Çréla Sanätana Gosvämé
writes:
In his own abode, Lord Çiva was just completing his worship of Lord
Saìkarñaëa and, absorbed in ecstatic love, he began dancing and
performing kértana. His followers, headed by Çré Nandiçvara, were lovingly
praising him by singing, playing musical instruments and calling out,
“Jaya! Jaya! All glories to you! All glories to you!” With her lotus hands,

8 ÇIVA-TATTVA LORD ÇIVA’S HIGHEST BENEDICTION
Pärvaté-devi was creating an enchanting rhythm with karatälas, and Lord
Çiva was praising her for that. Seeing all this from a distance, the sage
Närada jubilantly offered obeisances and began playing his vina. Time
and again he said, “You are the greatest recipient of Çré Kåñëa’s mercy.”
Repeating Lord Brahmä’s words, he began glorifying Çiva in a melodious
voice. When Çré Närada approached Çré Rudra (Lord Çiva) to take the
dust from his lotus feet, Çiva, who was intoxicated in the nectar-stream of
kåñëa-prema andwhoisverydeartotheVaiñëavas, pulledthesagenear, embraced
him, and respectfully said, ‘Oh, son of Brahmä! What are you saying?!’ (Çré Båhadbhägavatämåta
Chapter Three, verses 1-5)
Lord Çiva’s fame as the greatest devotee of Lord Kåñëa was first presented to
the English-speaking world by His Divine Grace Çréla A.C. Bhaktivedänta Swami
Prabhupäda. The foremost world-wide teacher of Gauòéya Vaiñëavism, Çréla Prabhupäda
inspired an international movement. He gave to the world a veritable treasure-chest
in his English translations of Vedic literature. It is that treasure-chest upon which we
continually drew, to enrich this publication with footnotes and supplements. It was
on the request of Çréla Prabhupäda that Çréla Näräyaëa Mahäräja now travels and
teaches audiences world-wide, nurturing the spiritual lives of thousands.
Çiva-Tattva is a compilation of four transcribed lectures of Çréla Näräyaëa
Mahäräja which, although not spoken in a series, takes the reader on a marvelous
journey. Chapters one and two were spoken during his 1997 World Tour in
Holland, on the morning and evening of July 3. Chapter three came from the
English translation of his Hindi lecture, given in Mathurä, India on the eve of
Çiva-ratri, March 5, 2000. Finally, in the fourth chapter, in a discourse spoken on
October 10, 2001, he takes us on a pilgrimage to a temple in the ancient city of
Jagannätha Puré, where Lord Çiva resides as Lokanätha Mahädeva.
The chronicles and personalities discussed in this book do not belong to the
realm of religion or mythology; rather, they encompass universal truth. Usage of
Sanskrit, the language in which the Vedic science was originally told, has been kept
to a minimum for easy reading. The occasional word used, such as bhakti, meaning
devotion, is clearly explained in the text. Following the tradition of our spiritual
preceptors, we use standard diacritical markings to indicate the pronunciation of
Sanskrit words. Pronounce ä like a in father, é like ea in neat, ü like oo in root, å like
ri in rip, à and ì like ng in hung, ç and ñ like sh in shy, and c like ch in chap.
Begging for the mercy of Çré Hari, Guru and Vaiñëava, we humbly present Çréla
Näräyaëa Mahäräja’s glorifications of that most unconventional of transcendental
personalities, Lord Çiva. We also beg the reader’s forgiveness for any mistakes
or shortcomings in our delivery of his offering to Lord Çiva, on the auspicious
occasion of Çiva-ratri – March, 2005.
The Editors
ii

2 ÇIVA-TATTVA LORD ÇIVA’S HIGHEST BENEDICTION 3
Once, the great sage Närada Muni traveled to the abode of
Lord Çiva and began to glorify him, saying, “You are very near and dear to
the Supreme Lord Kåñëa. Not only that, you are Kåñëa’s manifestation; you
are non-different from Him. You can give liberation and also kåñëa-prema,
the rare jewel of transcendental love for Kåñëa.”
Hearing Närada glorify him in numerous ways, Lord Çiva became
angry and said, “Your glorification of me is false. I am not at all dear to
Çré Kåñëa.”
Lord Çiva is actually most dear to Çré Kåñëa, and therefore Kåñëa
can give him services which He cannot give anyone else. When the
demigods and demons were churning the Milk Ocean in order to obtain
the nectar of immortality, the first substance produced was a powerful
and dangerous poison, burning the entire world. The demigods appealed
to Çré Kåñëa, and He advised them to request Lord Çiva to drink the
poison. Thus, they worshiped Lord Çiva and prayed, “Please save us!
Only you can protect us!” Lord Çiva collected the poison and took it in
his mouth, but he hesitated to swallow it, considering, “Lord Kåñëa is in
my heart. The poison will affect Him.” He therefore kept the poison in
his throat, which was burned, and his neck turned the color blue.
Now, out of genuine humility, Lord Çiva told Närada: “I want to be
His beloved devotee, but actually I am not. You know that I always wear
ashes from the burial grounds, and a garland of skulls. All my associates
are ghosts and witches, so I am not qualified to be Kåñëa’s dear devotee.
If I am so dear to Him, why would He have ordered me to engage with
the mode of ignorance in the terrible function of destroying the universe?
If I am such a great recipient of His mercy, why would he have ordered
me to become Çaìkaräcärya and preach a philosophy that is adverse to
Him?”
Actually, although he expressed otherwise, it was because Çiva
is so dear to Kåñëa that Kåñëa was able to give him the difficult task
of appearing as Çaìkaräcärya.1 Many people had been worshiping the
Supreme Lord only to fulfill their selfish purposes, thinking, “Simply by
our worship of God, He will be pleased with us and satisfy all our worldly
desires.” They worshiped Him only so that He would rapidly arrange for
all of their needs, not to please Him. Lord Kåñëa thought, “This is very
dangerous.” He called Lord Çiva and instructed him, “Such false devotees
will create great disturbances, so keep them far away from Me. Create a
philosophy which teaches, ‘brahma satyaà jagan mithyä – the Absolute is
true, this world is false.’ You should preach, ‘All souls are Çiva; all souls are
Brahmä; all are one. You are brahma, the impersonal Absolute. There is no
need to worship any other God; you are the Supreme God.’ ” Reluctant,
Lord Çiva asked Kåñëa, “Can you please tell someone else to do this? I am
not qualified for this service.” Kåñëa replied, “No, you will have to do this.
In the entire world, I see no one else who is as capable.”
Feeling ashamed, Lord Çiva now told Närada, “At last, I had to agree to
follow His order. Appearing as Çaìkaräcärya I preached everywhere, ‘You
are brahma, you are brahma, you are the impersonal brahma. The entire
world is false.’ I am so much regretting this. I know I have committed a
great offence by causing so many people to be averse to Lord Kåñëa. Still,
to carry out His order I spread this doctrine. It is clear by the fact that He
sometimes gives me such orders that I am not His dearest one.”
Cheating the Cheaters
Lord Çiva also expressed to Närada his regret in having given
benedictions to Lord Kåñëa’s enemies. To fulfill his Lord’s desires, he had
given benedictions to demons like Rävaëa, Våkäsura, Çälva and Jayadratha,
and thus he had performed many activities that were seemingly opposed
to Kåñëa and kåñëa-bhakti.
Närada Muni said, “Master, please don’t try to mislead me. I know
that whatever you do is to please Lord Kåñëa and to assist Him in His
pastimes, for the benefit of all beings. You told me that you have many
1 Lord Çiva was referring to the long history in relation to Çrépäd Çaìkaräcärya’s
propagating the concept of the living entities’ oneness with God in all respects.
Before the appearance of Çaìkaräcärya fifteen hundred years ago, voidist Buddhism,
which rejects the Vedas, was prominent in India. Çaìkaräcärya is an incarnation
of Lord Çiva, the topmost devotee of the Lord. However, in order to drive away
Buddhism and re-establish Vedic authority, he had to compromise with the atheistic
Buddhist philosophy and preach a non-devotional doctrine.


4 ÇIVA-TATTVA LORD ÇIVA’S HIGHEST BENEDICTION 5
times given benedictions to His enemies. I know that His enemies, as well
as the enemies of His devoted cousins, the Päëòavas, worship you for
ill-motivated benedictions. I also know that you grant them benedictions.
But those benedictions are not foolproof; they always have some loophole.
Actually, you cheat these beneficiaries in order to please Lord Kåñëa. You
are undoubtedly His dearest friend.”
Çiva and Närada continued to discuss some historical incidents which,
according to Çiva, proved that he was not dear to Kåñëa – but according to
Närada, proved the opposite.
A Loophole
The great epic Mahäbhärata tells of King Jayadratha, one of the
many demons who received such a clever benediction from Lord Çiva.
Duryodhana, the paternal cousin of the five Päëòava brothers, had given
his sister Dushala in marriage to King Jayadratha, and therefore the king
had also become like a brother-in-law of the Päëòavas. Once, Jayadratha
tried to kidnap the Päëòavas’ wife, Draupadé, desiring strongly to make
her his own wife. As he forced her onto his chariot, she admonished him,
crying, “I am the wife of the Päëòavas. When they catch you, they will
punish you and kill you!”
Jayadratha’s arrogance prevented him from hearing her, and he
continued his abduction. Meanwhile, the sage Närada approached the
Päëòavas and informed them, “Oh, I saw Jayadratha taking away Draupadé,
and she was weeping!”
Two of the Päëòavas, Bhéma and Arjuna, immediately chased after
Jayadratha. Bhéma dismounted his chariot and ran faster than Jayadratha’s
horses. With his bow and arrows, Arjuna created a fire that surrounded
the chariot of Jayadratha, who was then captured and could not move.
Severely beaten by Bhéma and arrested by Arjuna, Jayadratha was bound
to the chariot and taken to where Yudhiñöhira Mahäräja had been staying
with Draupadé.
Bhéma and Arjuna spoke to Yudhiñöhira, their respected senior
brother. Bhéma urged him, “I want to kill Jayadratha. Please order me to
kill him.”
In support of Bhéma, Arjuna said, “Jayadratha has performed a heinous
act and should be killed.”
King Yudhiñöhira replied, “The offense was committed against Draupadé.
We should take the case to her, and we will do whatever she orders.”
When Jayadratha was brought at the feet of Draupadé, she mercifully
told her husbands, “Don’t kill him; forgive him. He is our brother-in-law.
If you kill him, your cousin-sister will be widowed and she will weep for
the rest of her life.”
Bhéma and Arjuna then approached Lord Kåñëa and appealed to Him:
“What should we do? We have vowed to kill Jayadratha, and now Draupadé
tells us to forgive him.”
Kåñëa replied, “For one who has been honored, dishonor is worse
than death.”
Arjuna then shaved King Jayadratha’s head, leaving five patches of
hair, and he shaved one side of his face, leaving the other side unshaven.
Jayadratha felt humiliated, and after being released by Bhéma and Arjuna
he considered it better to have died. He thought, “I will somehow take
revenge.” Thus absorbed, he went to Gangotré in the Himälayas and
undertook a severe type of penance to please Lord Çiva.
After some months he gave up all food, water, and bodily activities,
and was about to die. At this point Lord Çiva came before him and asked
what boon he wanted as a result of his austerity. Jayadratha replied, “I
want revenge against the Päëòavas. I want to defeat and kill all of them.”
Lord Çiva told him, “You can defeat the Päëòavas, but only Yudhiñöhira,
Bhéma, Nakula and Sahadeva; not Arjuna.” Jayadratha said, “If you cannot
benedict me to my full satisfaction, then please grant that neither Arjuna
nor anyone else will be able to kill me.” Lord Çiva replied, “I can grant
you this: if your head is severed and falls on the ground, the person who
caused this will die immediately. Your life will be saved and your head
will rejoin your body. You may be ‘killed’ hundreds of thousands of times,
but you will not die. On the other hand, if your severed head falls into
your father’s hands and he throws it on the ground, then you will die.”
Jayadratha was satisfied, thinking, “My father would never do this.”
When the battle of Kurukñetra began, Jayadratha took the side of
the Päëòavas’ enemy, Duryodhana. One evening during the battle, as the
sun was setting, Jayadratha’s father was absorbed in prayer and making
an offering of water to the Sun-god. Arjuna saw this opportune moment.
With the skillful release of an arrow, he severed Jayadratha’s head from his
body and caused it to fall into the hands of his meditating father. Startled
and without thought, Jayadratha’s father tossed the head on the ground.
Then, opening his eyes he exclaimed, “What was that wet thing?” Seeing
that he had just thrown his son’s head, he began to cry, “Oh my son! Oh
my son! You are dead now!”


6 ÇIVA-TATTVA LORD ÇIVA’S HIGHEST BENEDICTION 7
A Clever Benediction
Envious of Kåñëa and with a desire for the strength to destroy him,
the demon Çälva also took shelter of Lord Çiva. He performed a severe type
of austerity and ate no more than a handful of ashes daily. After one year,
Lord Çiva became pleased with him and asked him to beg for a boon.
Çälva begged from Lord Çiva the gift of an airplane, saying, “This
airplane should perform as I wish; it should be operated by my mind. On
my order it should go to heaven or anywhere I desire. In summer it should
be air-conditioned. If there are only two men, there should only be two
seats, and if I want to travel with hundreds of thousands of persons, many
seats should manifest. It should never crash due to mechanical difficulty,
and it should be equipped with all varieties of weapons. It should be
dangerous and fearful to the Yadus.”
Lord Çiva agreed, and Çälva was helped by the demon Maya Dänava
to manufacture a mystical airplane that began to destroy Dvärakä, Lord
Kåñëa’s abode. Çälva personally attacked from above, and his soldiers
attacked on the ground. Headed by Pradyumna, the Yadu dynasty warriors
fought with Çälva and his army, but they could not defeat him.
Finally, Lord Kåñëa personally appeared on the battlefield, and after
much intense fighting on both sides and many mystic displays by Çälva, the
Lord took up His disc, cut off the demon’s head, and gave him liberation.
In this way, the benedictions given by Lord Çiva to the enemies of
Lord Kåñëa always have a weak point – a loophole. Lord Çiva is extremely
clever, and he is always serving his Lord, Çré Kåñëa. Närada knew this fact,
and he wanted to publicize Lord Çiva’s glories. Çiva is very near and dear
to Kåñëa, and non-different from Him. Try to always honor him, for he is
Kåñëa’s greatest devotee.
nimna-gänäà yathä gaìgä
devänäm acyuto yathä
vaiñëavänäà yathä çambhuù
puräëänäm idam tathä
Çrémad-Bhägavatam (12.13.16)
Just as the Gaìgä is the greatest of all rivers, Lord Acyuta [Kåñëa]
the supreme among deities and Lord Çambhu [Çiva] the greatest of
Vaiñëavas, so Çrémad-Bhägavatam is the greatest of all Puräëas.
The Principle of Çiva
The principle of Çiva – çiva-tattva – is extremely complex. The principle
of Brahmä is not as complicated, because Lord Brahmä is always a jéva, a
finite spirit soul. Sometimes, when there is no qualified jéva, Lord Viñëu
(Kåñëa’s expansion) personally takes the post of Brahmä, but that is rare.
Lord Çiva is not like that; he is not a finite soul.
After passing through the eight material coverings, and after crossing the
Virajä (the river that divides the material world and the spiritual world) and
the planet of Lord Brahmä (the highest material planet), one comes to the
planet of Çiva. There he is known as Sadäçiva, a manifestation of Lord Viñëu.
Çiva-tattva can be understood by the analogy of yogurt and milk.
Yogurt is nothing but a transformation of milk. Milk can become yogurt, but
yogurt cannot become milk. This analogy is found in Brahma-saàhitä and
elucidated in Çréla Jéva Gosvämé’s commentary: “Just as milk is transformed
into yogurt by contact with a transforming agent, Çré Govinda, Lord Çré
Kåñëa, similarly accepts the form of Çambhu (Çiva) in order to accomplish a
specific purpose. The example of yogurt is actually given in order to convey
the idea of cause and effect, not the idea of transformation. Çré Kåñëa is reality
and cannot be transformed, so it is not possible for Him to undergo any kind
of distortion. A wish-fulfilling gem manifests many things according to one’s
desire, yet its constitutional nature remains untransformed.”2
Rämeçvara Mahädeva
When Çré Rämacandra was making the bridge to Laìkä, he established
a Çiva-liìga (deity form of Çiva) called Rämeçvara. All the common people
began glorifying Lord Çiva, shouting, “Rämeçvara ki jaya! You are Räma’s
éçvara: you are the lord of Räma.” The demigods were unsatisfied by this and
announced through an arial voice, “Rämas ca asau éçvaraù: Räma is God, and
Çaìkarä is also God; they are the same.” Hearing this, the Çiva-liìga broke.
Lord Çiva emerged from the liìga and told them all, “You are all foolish; you
do not know my tattva, the established truths regarding my identity. Räma is
my beloved and my God, and that is why I am called Rämeçvara.”
2“ In this case the special transforming agent is constituted of a mixture of mäyä’s
aspect of the mode of ignorance, the minuteness aspect of the marginal potency,
and a slight degree of the combined knowledge (saàvit) and bliss (hlädiné)
aspects of the transcendental potency. The effulgent subordinate controller in
the form of Çambhu-liìga, being united with this special transforming agent, is
constitutionally the semblance of God’s expansion.” (Brahma-saàhitä commentary
by Çréla Bhaktivinoda Öhäkura)


8 ÇIVA-TATTVA LORD ÇIVA’S HIGHEST BENEDICTION 9
Granting Perfect Love
Lord Çiva eternally resides in Lord Kåñëa’s abode, Våndävana, where
he manifests many forms to render devotional services to Him. The form of
Gopéçvara Mahädeva3 was manifested by Lord Kåñëa’s desire. When Kåñëa
desired to perform His räsa dance, Çrématé Rädhikä, the embodiment of His
pleasure potency, manifested from His left side and Gopéçvara Mahädeva
manifested from His right side. The form of Çiva who lives in Käçé or Kailäsa
in the material world is a partial manifestation of the original Sadäçiva in
Våndävana. The many other commonly worshiped forms of Lord Çiva are
expansions of Sadäçiva. They are not the original. Partial expansions such
as Péppaleçvara Mahädeva, Bhüteçvara Mahädeva, Raìgeçvara Mahädeva
and so on cannot award the benediction that can be attained by the mercy of
Gopéçvara – the highest perfection of love, namely gopé-prema.
Çréla Raghunätha däsa Gosvämé has composed a prayer in his
Vraja-viläsa-stava:
mudä gopendrasyatmaja bhuja parisranga nédhaye
sphurad gopirvrndair yam iha bhägavatam pranayibhih
bhajadbhistair bhaktyäs vamabhilasitam präptam aciräd
yamitire gopéçvaram anudinam taà kila bhaje
I daily worship Gopéçvara Mahädeva, who is situated on the
bank of Yamunä. That very Gopéçvara was worshipped with deep
devotion by the gopés, and he quickly fulfilled their desire to attain
a supremely precious jewel in the form of the embrace of the son of
Nanda Mahäräja [Kåñëa].
Çréla Sanätana Gosvämé, the great Vaiñëava saint who resided in
Våndävana near the old Çré Madana-Mohana Temple, would go daily
to see Çré Gopéçvara Mahädeva at his temple. Once, in his older years,
Sanätana Gosvämé had a dream wherein Gopéçvara Mahädeva appeared
and instructed him: “Now that you are old, please do not go through so
much trouble to see me.” Sanätana Gosvämé replied, “I will continue to
come. I cannot change this habit.” Gopéçvara Mahädeva said, “Then I will
come and stay very near to your residence, manifesting in Bankhandé.” The
very next day, Çré Gopéçvara Mahädeva appeared in Bankhandé, halfway
between his orginal temple and Çréla Sanätana Gosvämé’s residence. Seeing
this, Sanätana Gosvämé became overwhelmed with transcendental ecstasy,
and from that day on he visited Bankhandé Mahädeva every day.
Wherever he was, Çréla Sanätana Gosvämé could not live without his
beloved Lord Çiva – Gopéçvara Mahädeva and Bankhandé Mahädeva in
Våndävana, and Kämeçvara Mahädeva in Kämyavana forest. In Govardhana
he would stay near his very dear friend, Cakreçvara Mahädeva, who acquired
the name when he served Govardhana Hill and the Vrajaväsés by holding up
his trident like a cakra (disc weapon), protecting them from the torrential
deluge sent by King Indra.
Prior to this, Lord Çiva had asked Çré Kåñëa for the boon to witness
His childhood pastimes. Kåñëa ordered him to situate himself in Nandagaon
in the form of a hill. Çiva followed this order and became Nandéçvara
Hill, and he thus became known as Nandéçvara. (Lord Brahmä became
Brahma-parvata, the mountain in Çrématé Rädhikä’s birthplace, Varñäëä.
Because Brahmä is so near to Rädhikä, he is also our Gurudeva.)
We honor Lord Çiva as a great Vaiñëava and as Guru. We do not worship
him separately. We observe Çiva-ratri, Lord Çiva’s appearance day, and we
glorify him in connection to his relationship with Çré Kåñëa. Çréla Sanätana
Gosvämé has written in his Hari-bhakti-viläsa that all Vaiñëavas should observe
Çiva-caturdaçé (Çiva-ratri). Lord Çiva, in whom all good qualities reside, should
certainly be honored by the observance of this day.
3 In his original and most pure form, Çiva is eternally Gopéçvara Mahadeva. Yet, he
performed the following human-like pastime in which he ‘became’ Gopéçvara:
“Lord Çiva wanted to become a gopé. He performed austerities, and when
Paurëamäsé Yogamäyä became pleased and appeared before him, he prayed
to join Kåñëa’s räsa-lila. Paurëamäsé mercifully assisted him in dipping in
Brahmä-kuëòa, and he immediately assumed the form of a teenage gopé. He then
went to the place where räsa-lila was being performed, and hid there in a grove.
“Kåñëa and the gopés sensed that someone of a different mood had come. They
asked each other, ‘Why are you not so happy today? What is the matter?’After searching,
they discovered the new gopé and asked ‘her’, ‘Who are you? What is your name? Who
are your parents? What is your husband’s name? Where is your in-laws’ house?’
“When Çiva could not reply, they began to slap her so much that her cheeks
became swollen and she began to cry, ‘Yogamäyä, Yogamäyä. Save me. I will never
again come to Våndävana, and I will never dare take part in räsa-lélä.’ Paurëamäsé
arrived, and she requested the gopés to show Lord Çiva mercy. ‘She is the object
of my mercy,’ Paurëamäsé told them.The gopés then accepted her as a gopé and
Kåñëa named her Gopéçvara (she whose éçvaras, controllers, are the gopés). He
blessed her to become the guard of the räsa-lélä and said, ‘Without the sanction of
Gopéçvara, no one will be able to enter the räsa-lélä.’ ” (Pinnacle of Devotion)


10 ÇIVA-TATTVA LORD ÇIVA’S HIGHEST BENEDICTION 11
We offer obeisance to Lord Çiva with prayers like this:
våndävanävani-pate! jaya soma soma-maule
sanaka-sanandana-sanätana-näradeòya
gopéçvara! vraja-viläsi-yugäìghri-padme
prema prayaccha nirupädhi namo namas te
(Saìkalpa-kalpadruma 103)
O Gatekeeper of Våndävana! O Soma, all glories to you! O you whose
forehead is decorated with the moon, and who is worshipable by
the sages headed by Sanaka, Sanandana, Sanätana and Närada! O
Gopéçvara! Desiring that you bestow upon me prema for the lotus
feet of Çré Çré Rädhä-Mädhava, who perform joyous pastimes in Vrajadhäma,
I offer obeisances unto you time and again.
By Çiva’s Benediction
A brähmaëa in Käçé Väräëasé once prayed to Lord Çiva, “I want to give
my daughter in marriage, but I have no money. Please give me money.” Lord
Çiva told him, “Go to Våndävana and meet with Çréla Sanätana Gosvämé.
You can ask him to give you some wealth for your daughter’s marriage.” The
brähmaëa went to Våndävana, by foot, and there he asked the villagers there
for the whereabouts of a person named Sanätana Gosvämé. As they all knew
him, they pointed out his residence.
Çréla Sanätana Gosvämé was practicing bhajana near the Yamunä River
at Käliya-hrada, the former abode of the very poisonous snake named Käliya.
Käliya-hrada was close to the Yamunä, and therefore its surrounding area was
full of sand. Çréla Sanätana Gosvämé wore only a loincloth. He used to go
begging door-to-door for a small amount of prasäda (Kåñëa’s food remnants),
and would take as his meal only one dry chapatti (flat bread), with no salt.
The brähmaëa arrived at his cottage and told him, “I went to Çaìkara
Mahädeva, Lord Çiva, and he told me to meet you. He said you will give me
some wealth for my daughter’s marriage.” Sanätana Gosvämé replied, “I have
no possessions. You can see that I have nothing but a loincloth.” Then he
thought, “Oh, Çiva cannot tell a lie. He is my bosom friend.” Thinking of
Lord Siva and contemplating further, he remembered a touchstone he had
once disgarded and then forgotten. Now he told the brähmaëa, “Go to the
Yamunä and remove some of the sand, and there you will find a touchstone. It
is somewhere in the sand, though I don’t remember where.”
The brähmaëa found the jewel, touched it to iron, and the iron turned
into gold. He was very, very happy that Lord Çiva had told him to come to
Våndävana, and thought with gratitude, “My prayer has been answered by
him.” On the way home, however, his greed for money increased and he began
thinking, “Why did Sanätana Gosvämé keep the touchstone in the sand? It
had no use there. He must have still more valuable jewels.”
He thus returned, and Sanätana Gosvämé asked him, “Why have you come
back?” He replied, “I’ve come because I know that you have more valuable
jewels than this.” Sanätana Gosvämé then said, “Go and throw the touchstone
in the Yamunä. The brähmaëa did so with all his power, and then Sanätana
Gosvämé told him, “Come here. Come here.” He gave him the mantra, “Hare
Kåñëa Hare Kåñëa Kåñëa Kåñëa Hare Hare, Hare Räma Hare Räma Räma Räma
Hare Hare” and said, “I do not have worldly jewels, but I have transcendental
jewels. The jewel of Lord Kåñëa and Çré Rädhä will come to you in a very short
time. So remain here. Your daughter’s marriage will take place automatically.
Stay here and chant Hare Kåñëa.” That brähmaëa followed his instruction and
Gopéçvara Mahädeva in Våndävana, U.P., India became a very elevated saint.


12 ÇIVA-TATTVA THE POST AND THE PERSON 13
Sré Närada desired to proclaim the glories of Lord Çiva. As previously
described, he praised Çiva as the greatest devotee of Lord Kåñëa and most
dear to Him, and Lord Çiva became upset by hearing those praises. Çiva
then related a number of incidents which, according to him, were evidence
that he was not dear to Kåñëa at all.
Now Lord Çiva compares himself to Çré Prahläda Mahäräja,4 the famed
devotee of Lord Nåsiàhadeva described in Çrémad-Bhägavatam. He told
Närada, “Çré Prahläda Mahäräja is superior to me, and it is he who is the
dear devotee of the Lord.” Even though Lord Çiva is superior to Prahläda
Mahäräja, he told Närada that Prahläda Mahäräja is superior. Why? He
said this to encourage people to follow Prahläda Mahäräja’s ideal character
and teachings.
However, Prahläda Mahäräja cannot enter Çré Kåñëa’s transcendental
abode, Våndävana, whereas Lord Çiva resides there eternally as Gopéçvara.
Çiva serves Çré Kåñëa personally in numerous ways. He and his wife
Pärvaté-devé meditate on añöa-käléya-lélä, Lord Çré Kåñëa’s confidential
4 In the hermitage of Çré Närada Muni, Prahläda Mahäräja heard the message
of Çrémad-Bhägavatam while within the womb of his mother. From his birth,
Prahläda was fixed in transcendental realization of the all-pervading presence of
the Supreme Lord, and he preached love of God to his schoolmates at the tender
age of five. Despite efforts by his atheistic father to change his nature – efforts
that culminated in repeated attempts to kill him by means of administering poison,
putting him in boiling oil, tossing him from the top of a cliff and so on – Prahläda
continued to experience great joy by remembering Lord Viñëu and chanting his
holy names. Prahläda was protected by the Supreme Lord in every situation.
Finally, Lord Viñëu appeared in the form of a half-man, half-lion and killed his
demonic father. When offered a benediction by the Lord, Prahläda simply asked
for the liberation of his father, as well as that of all conditioned souls. He is honored
in this world by all pure devotees.

14 ÇIVA-TATTVA THE POST AND THE PERSON 15
The Duty of Destruction
What is the function of Lord Çiva’s post, and why is it superior to that
of Lord Brahmä? One reason is that Brahmä cannot execute pralaya, the
complete destruction of the universe – a very dangerous thing, whereas Çiva
can do so.
Çiva’s function as destroyer is similar to that of a farmer who plants and
cultivates a large area of wheat. The farmer carefully waters and nourishes
the crop, guarding it from animals, and after five or six months the wheat
matures and ripens. Then, either by hand or a machine, the farmer harvests
the plants and carefully removes the grains from their shafts. The rest of the
plant-matter becomes refuse, and subject to rotting and attracting disease,
vermin, and snakes. Therefore, the farmer sets fire to it and burns it.
Just as the farmer extracts the grains from the plants, Lord Çiva extracts
the eternal spirit souls from their material bodies and from the world. At the
time of annihilation he creates an inferno, setting the entire universe on fire,
but the spirit souls are not destroyed.
There are two kinds of universal devastations: one at the end of Lord
Brahmä’s day and one at the end of his life. At the end of his day (4,320,000,000
solar years) he rests in a mystic sleep within the body of Garbhodakaçäyé
Viñëu, and all the conditioned living entities enter as well.7
While the entire universe is submerged in water, the living entities rest in
their subtle bodies within the transcendental body of Garbhodakaçäyé Viñëu.
They await the start of the next day of Brahmä, the next material creation or
manifestation. Some of them become liberated, and others do not.
5 “Çréla Madhväcärya is the original äcärya for those who belong to the Madhva-
Gauòéya-sampradäya.”(SB 6.1.40 purport) “This Madhva-Gauòéya-sampradäya is also
known as the Brahmä-sampradäya because the disciplic succession originally began
from Brahmä. Brahmä instructed the sage Närada, Närada instructed Vyäsadeva, and
Vyäsadeva instructed Madhva Muni, or Madhväcärya.” (Kåñëa Introduction).
6 “The Vedas say, ‘Svadharma-niñöhaù çata janmabhiù pumän viriïcatäm eti - One who
strictly follows the principles of varëäçrama-dharma for at least one hundred births will
be rewarded with the post of Lord Brahmä.’ ” (Çrémad-Bhägavatam 5.20.33 purport)
Varëäçrama-dharma – the institutions dividing society into four divisions of
soical life and four occupational divisions of castes.
eight-fold daily pastimes. These secret pastimes are very confidential, yet
both Çiva and Pärvaté are able to meditate upon them. Çiva is hundreds of
thousands of times superior to and more worshipable than Çré Prahläda
Mahäräja, and yet the artful Çiva declared Prahläda Mahäräja to be superior.
Why did he do so? In one sense Prahläda Mahäräja is superior, and in
another sense he is not.
We can reconcile this by considering the two perspectives from which
to understand the identity of Lord Çiva: We can see Çiva from the point
of view of his post, and also from the point of view of his personality. As
a personality, separate from his post, he appears as an associate of the
Supreme Lord, such as Gopéçvara, Hanumän and Bhéma. As Gopéçvara
he resides eternally in Våndävana. As Hanumän he always associates with
and serves Lord Räma. As Bhéma he always serves Lord Kåñëa. And, when
Hanumän and Bhéma combine together in this present age of Kali-yuga,
they become Madhväcärya, our Sampradäya-guru.5
From the point of view of Lord Çiva’s function as the god of annihilation,
and also that of Brahmä as the secondary creator of the universe, Çiva and
Brahmä are actually posts. Lord Brahmä and Lord Çiva are not ordinary human
beings, but their posts are like that of the president or prime minister of a nation,
wherein the man representing the post has to perform a certain defined job.
Both as the post and the person, Çiva is superior to Brahmä. Lord Çiva is
an expansion of Lord Viñëu, but sometimes a jéva (living entity) may become
Çiva’s expansion known as Rudra. If a man purely performs the duties of
varëäçrama for one hundred births, he may become Brahmä.6 In other words,
he may attain the position or post of Brahmä. In turn, when a person in the
post of Brahmä carries out his function expertly for one hundred births, he
becomes qualified to perform the function of Çiva in his manifestation as
Rudra. Çiva’s post is therefore superior to that of Brahmä, and this is also
evidence that Çiva is more powerful than Brahmä.
7 “At the beginning of Brahmä’s day, all living entities become manifest from the
unmanifest state, and thereafter, when the night falls, they are merged into the
unmanifest again. Again and again, when Brahmä’s day arrives, all living entities
come into being, and with the arrival of Brahmä’s night they are helplessly
annihilated.” (Bhagavad-gétä 8.18-19)
“At the end of the day, under the insignificant portion of the mode of darkness,
the powerful manifestation of the universe merges in the darkness of night. By the
influence of eternal time, the innumerable living entities remain merged in that
dissolution, and everything is silent.” (Çrémad-Bhägavatam 3.11.28)
“The dissolution of the three worlds is effected by the incarnation of darkness,
Rudra, represented by the fire of eternal time which blazes over the three worlds.
These three worlds are known as Bhüù, Bhuvaù and Svaù (Pätäla, Martya and
Svarga). The innumerable living entities merge into that dissolution, which appears
to be the dropping of the curtain of the scene of the Supreme Lord’s energy, and so
everything becomes silent.” (Çrémad-Bhägavatam 3.11.28 purport) cont...


16 ÇIVA-TATTVA THE POST AND THE PERSON 17
this third eye that he generates fire and employs it at the time of the universal
destruction.
Seen from this perspective – the destroyer – Lord Çiva cannot serve
Çré Kåñëa directly, because he is engaged at his post. Those souls who are
liberated after hundreds of thousands of lifetimes of devotional practice,
having renounced all responsibilities and concerns of the world – including
occupations like that of Brahmä and Çiva – and who constantly hear about,
glorify, and remember Lord Kåñëa, take birth in this world as pure devotees
like Prahläda Mahäräja. This was told by Lord Çiva to Çré Närada.
Prahläda Mahäräja has nothing to do with this world; nothing to create
or demolish. He rejected all such affairs as insignificant. Although he had
inherited a large kingdom, it was controlled and governed by his ministers.
His senses were totally absorbed in the transcendental loving service to the
Supreme Lord. He was always engaged in hearing the name and glories of the
Lord, singing and speaking about his glories, remembering and meditating
on him, offering prayers, carrying out the his orders and fully surrendering
to him.
Devotees in Prahläda’s category have no need to approach Lord Kåñëa’s
manifestations like Lord Nåsiàhadeva and Lord Räma, for the Lord personally
comes to them in these forms. Lord Çiva told Çré Närada that because he is
always engaged in the post of controlling the universe, he can neither see nor
offer services to the Lord daily, as Prahläda Mahäräja sees Lord Vämanadeva
or Lord Nåsiàhadeva. Vämanadeva and Nåsiàhadeva are both manifestations
of the same Lord, who regularly gives Prahläda his divine association and the
opportunity to serve and offer obeisance at his lotus feet.
Although both Brahmä and Çiva are actually superior in bhakti (devotion)
to Prahläda Mahäräja, their posts involve contact with the three guëas, or
modes of material nature, namely goodness, passion and ignorance. The role
of Lord Brahmä is creation and procreation in raja-guëa, the mode of passion.
Lord Çiva’s role of demolition and dissolution is in tama-guëa, the mode of
ignorance. It is for this reason that they are called guëa-ävatäras, incarnations
of the material qualities.
Prahläda Mahäräja is nirguëa, transcendental to the three modes of
nature. He has nothing to do with activities in material goodness, passion,
and ignorance, by which this world is shackled. Lord Çiva is also beyond the
three modes of nature, but he adopts the mode of ignorance (tama-guëa) to
efficiently perform his function.
8 “There are two types of dissolution of the manifested cosmos. At the end of every
4,320,000,000 solar years, when Brahmä, the lord of one particular universe, goes
to sleep, there is one annihilation. And at the end of Lord Brahmä’s life, which
takes place at the end of Brahmä’s one hundred years of age, in our calculation at
the end of 8,640,000,000 x 30 x 12 x 100 solar years, there is complete annihilation
of the entire universe, and in both the periods both the material energy called the
mahat-tattva and the marginal energy called jéva-tattva merge in the person of the
Supreme Lord.” (Çrémad-Bhägavatam 1.10.21 purport)
9 “Käraëodakaçäyé Viñëu is the first incarnation of the Supreme Lord, and he
is the master of eternal time, space, cause and effects, mind, the elements, the
material ego, the modes of nature, the senses, the universal form of the Lord,
Garbhodakaçäyé Viñëu, and the sum total of all living beings, both moving and
nonmoving.” (Çrémad-Bhägavatam 2.6.42)
When Lord Brahmä completes the one hundred celestial years of his life,
Lord Çiva again performs this duty of destruction. At that time all the spirit
souls enter into the body of Käraëodakaçäyé Viñëu or Mahä-Viñëu. At the end
of each day of Lord Brahmä, all souls enter Garbhodakaçäyé Viñëu, and at the
end of Brahmä’s life, even the millions of manifestations of Garbhodakaçäyé
Viñëu enter Käraëodakaçäyé Viñëu8 along with the spirit souls. At the time
of creation, Käraëodakaçäyé Viñëu generates innumerable manifestations of
Garbhodakaçäyé Viñëu, and at the time of complete annihilation, they enter
back into his body.9
Lord Çiva is not a living entity, but he is also not in the category of Lord
Viñëu. He is much more powerful than any living entity, even up to Lord
Brahmä. However, he is not equal to Lord Viñëu. Because he is almost as good
as the Supreme Personalty of Godhead, he can see the three phases of time:
past, present and future. One of his eyes is like the sun and another is like
the moon. He also has a third eye, located between his eyebrows. It is from
7 cont. “It is said that the blazing fire from the mouth of Saìkarñaëa rages for one
hundred years of the demigods, or 36,000 human years. Then for another 36,000
years there are torrents of rain, accompanied by violent winds and waves, and the
seas and oceans overflow. People forget all these devastations of the worlds and
think themselves happy in the material progress of civilization. This is called mäyä,
or ‘that which is not.’” (Çrémad-Bhägavatam 3.11.31 purport)
“Thereafter, at the end of the millennium, the Lord Himself, in the form
of Rudra, the destroyer, will annihilate the complete creation as the wind
displaces the clouds. This creation is very appropriately compared to clouds.”
(Çrémad-Bhägavatam 2.10.43)

18 ÇIVA-TATTVA THE POST AND THE PERSON 19
Regarding the analogy of the shops in a market, that expert tells you,
“This shop is good, that shop is better, and this one is the best. Similarly, in his
Çré Båhad-bhägavatämåta, Çréla Sanätana Gosvämé establishes the gradations of
excellence of various devotees and their devotion, in order to help his readers
determine their spiritual path.
The history of Närada Muni’s coming to the abode of Lord Çiva and
glorifying him was first narrated in this Çré Båhad-bhägavatämåta. Like Çréla
Sanätana Gosvämé, Närada is also that expert described above. He desired to
establish pure bhakti in the world, and therefore he played the role of searching
for the greatest devotee and recipient of Lord Kåñëa’s mercy. His search had
taken him first to the ‘shop’ of a brähmaëa in Prayäga, and after that to South
India, to the shop of a king. Then he traveled to heaven, where he entered the
shop of King Indra, and Indra sent him to the shop of Lord Brahmä. Brahmä
sent him to Lord Çiva, and Lord Çiva is now sending him to Prahläda Mahäräja.
Gradually, Çré Närada will bring us to the greatest recipients of Lord Kåñëa’s
mercy, the gopés. In the form of Gopéçvara, Lord Çiva is the beloved servant
and associate of those gopés.
The Personal Associate
Regarding Lord Çiva’s glorification of Prahläda Mahäräja, now consider
Lord Çiva’s identity as a transcendental personality – separate from his post.
Sometimes senior Vaiñëavas express sincere recognition of the novice,
inspiring him or her on the path of devotion. The Vaiñëava may say, “Oh, you
work so hard and earn money, and with that money you support and nourish
me. I have no means at all. I do nothing but visit for a short while, eating and
sleeping at your expense. I would not be able to speak the glories of Lord
Kåñëa at this festival if you had not arranged for the management of all the
activities here, so you are superior to me.”
Out of sincere humility, gratitude and affection, liberated souls speak in
this endearing manner, and at the same time they are fixed in the realization
that they are always being personally maintained by the Supreme Lord. The
senior Vaiñëava has the disciple’s personal benefit in mind.
However, Lord Çiva was not speaking for Prahläda Mahäräja’s benefit,
but to acquaint aspiring devotees with the stages of devotion. His desire was to
facilitate the service of Çré Närada Muni and Çréla Sanätana Gosvämé10, whose
mission was to establish in the world the sequence of the grades of devotion
and ultimately establish the glories of the gopés. Try to understand all these
truths, and seek to gradually become firmly situated in bhakti.
Imagine that you are in a market in which there are thousands of varieties
of shops. In some of those shops there are products made of iron, in some
shops there are products made of gold, in some there are jewels, and in others
cintämaëi (wish-fulfilling stones). An expert is guiding you through all the
shops, pointing out different products and revealing which are superior.
If there are a thousand pounds of iron and only one ounce of gold, the
gold has more value. On the other hand, many pounds of gold will not amount
to the value of one Kaustubha-maëi or a similarly precious stone. Millions of
such precious jewels cannot compare with a tiny quantity of cintämaëi, and
even millions of cintämaëi stones cannot compare with one holy name of Lord
Kåñëa.
Now suppose someone is chanting the name of Lord Kåñëa alone, and
another is absorbed in the name of Rädhä-Ramaëa. The name Rädhä-Ramaëa,
meaning Çré Kåñëa, the enjoyer of pastimes with Çrématé Rädhäräëé, has more
transcendental taste (rasa) than the name Kåñëa alone. The person absorbed
in that holy name will therefore experience a greater spiritual pleasure.
10 Please see the Preface for more details.


20 ÇIVA-TATTVA LORD ÇIVA’S HIGHEST BENEDICTION
here are three considerations (vicäras) from which to understand
the relationship between Lord Kåñëa and Lord Çiva. One is called
tattva-gata-vicära – the consideration of their relationship by established
philosophical truth. Another is called aiçvarya-gata-vicära – the consideration
of their relationship in the Supreme Lord’s pastimes of majesty, and the
third is naravat-gata-vicära – the consideration of their relationship in the
Supreme Lord’s sweet, human-like pastimes.
According to philosophical truth (tattva), Çré Kåñëa’s plenary portion
is Sadäçiva, and Sadäçiva’s partial manifestation is Lord Çiva. From the
perspective of Lord Kåñëa’s pastimes in opulence and majesty (aiçvarya),
Lord Kåñëa is Çiva’s worshipful Deity, who is always loved, honored and
respected by him. However, in naravat-gata-vicära, Kåñëa plays another
role – that of an ordinary human being. He performs pastimes as a very
young, small child who cannot do anything independently. His mother,
Çrématé Yaçodä-devé, feeds Him and tends to all His needs. During these
human-like pastimes, Lord Çiva might come and give Him benedictions.
In the scriptures called the Puräëas it is stated that when Kåñëa resided in
Dvärakä, He worshiped Çiva to beget a child from the womb of His wife
Jämbavaté. Although Çiva is worshiped by Kåñëa in those pastimes, he never
thinks himself superior. He is always conscious that Kåñëa is the Supreme
Personality of Godhead and that he is Kåñëa’s eternal servant.
It is essential to have a clear understanding of these truths. One who
knows these three perspectives or considerations can understand the
relationship between Lord Çiva and his Lord.
Established Truth
According to the principle of philosophical truth, Lord Çiva is a partial
manifestation of Çré Kåñëa’s plenary expansion, Sadäçiva. When Kåñëa
desires to create, He expands Himself as Mahä-Saìkarñaëa, and possessing

22 ÇIVA-TATTVA THREE CONSIDERATIONS 23
this creative desire, Saìkarñaëa expands as Mahä-Viñëu (Käraëodakaçäyé
Viñëu). Mahä-Viñëu then desires to create, and His desire takes the form
of a light that emanates from between his eyebrows. The semblance or dim
twilight reflection of that light is called Çambhu-liìga (Çiva). Many people
worship Lord Çiva in the form of Çambhu-liìga. The light itself is eternal and
is not Çambhu-liìga; Çambhu-liìga is its semblance or shadow.
There is another semblance called Yoni, and this is the shadow of
Ramä-devé. Ramä-devé is the spiritual potency of Mahä-Viñëu, and in
Vaikuëöha she is Lord Näräyaëa’s beloved consort Lakñmé-devé. This is
her original transcendental form, and her shadow is the limited conceiving
potency – Yoni.
Mahä-Viñëu has two types of potency with which he creates the
material worlds. One type of potency is called nimitta – the instrumental
cause of creation, and the other is called upädäna – the ingredient cause.
Instrumental and ingredient causes can be explained in this way: Suppose I
say, “I killed a snake with a stick.” The person who desired and performed
the activity is the instrumental cause (nimitta), and the stick is the ingredient
cause (upädäna). In another example, a potter makes a pot. The desire or
will of the potter to make the pot is the instrumental cause. The sum total
of all the instruments used to create it, like the wheel, clay, mud and water,
is the ingredient cause.
Mahä-Viñëu’s eternal instrumental potency takes its reflected form as
Yoni, the limited shadow potency, and the ingredient cause assumes the
reflection-form of Çambhu-liìga. Creation then takes place by the union
of Çambhu-liìga and his female consort Yoni. Çambhu is called the liìga
of the Supreme Lord, which means that he is the manifest symbol of the
Lord’s male generative capacity, and he appears for the purpose of preparing
the cosmic manifestation. That potency which gives birth to the material
creation is the energy called Mäyä, and her intrinsic form is Yoni.
Actually, the original instrumental and ingredient cause is not Yoni and
Çambhu; it is Mahä-Viñëu. Material nature, as Yoni, desires to create by dint
of the käma-béja (desire seed) impregnated in her, and she is therefore the
secondary instrumental cause. The desire-seed gave her the urge to create,
and because she then wanted to create, she is called the instrumental cause.
Çambhu supplies the materials of creation, and he is therefore called the
ingredient cause. Çambhu, the dim reflection of the Supreme Lord’s own
divine desire-filled glance, consummates his union with Yoni. However, he
can do nothing independent of the energy of Mahä-Viñëu.
Mahä-Viñëu is the Supreme Personified Will, and it is he who brings
about the union of the two – Yoni and Çambhu. He is the divine dominating
person, the plenary portion of Lord Kåñëa and the creator of the mundane
world. In order for creation to take place, there must be the desire of the
Supreme Doer. He must be present. The instrumental cause and ingredient
cause must be mixed with the desire or glance of Mahä-Viñëu.
The initial form of the creation is mahat-tattva, the sum-total
twenty-four elements.11 This mahat-tattva is the reflection of the käma-béja,
the original desire-seed in Goloka Våndävana. The seed of amorous creative
desire in Goloka is the embodiment of pure cognition. It is a prototype of
the sex desire in this mundane world, though it is located far from it. The
seed of the mundane sex desire is thus the perverted reflection of the seed of
the original creative desire in Goloka Våndävana.
Service in Pastimes of Majesty
The historical narrations that follow are examples of aiçvarya-gatavicära,
Lord Çiva’s relationship with Kåñëa from the perspective of Kåñëa’s
majesty. Revealed in Çrémad-Bhägavatam, these transcendental histories
demonstrate Lord Çiva’s dependence on Him. They also further reveal that
when Çiva gives benedictions to Kåñëa’s enemies, he does so to assist in the
Supreme Lord’s pastimes, which are performed for the benefit of all beings.
Çiva’s Dependence
Çrémad-Bhägavatam tells of a demon named Våkäsura who, desiring to
enjoy Lord Çiva’s wife, Pärvaté, performed severe austerities to ‘please’ Lord
Çiva. When Lord Çiva appeared before him to grant him a benediction, Våkäsura
expressed his desire that as soon as he would touch the head of anyone, that
person’s head would immediately split open and he would die.
Lord Çiva granted this benediction, and Våkäsura immediately rushed
forward to use it against Lord Çiva.
Çiva asked, “What are you doing?” He replied, “Now I am applying my
benediction.” He did not say, “I want Pärvaté.” He simply looked at Pärvaté
and then ran towards Lord Çiva. Fearful, Çiva ran away, and Våkäsura
immediately chased after him. Lord Çiva was attired in a deerskin, which fell
11 Mahat-tattva: the twenty-four elements are the five gross elements, the three
subtle elements, ten senses, five sense objects and the total material cause.



24 ÇIVA-TATTVA THREE CONSIDERATIONS 25
off, and then his òamaru drum also fell. He kept running, however, and he
remembered his Lord. Who was the Lord he remembered? It was Çré Kåñëa.
This is aiçvarya-gata-vicära.
Lord Çiva fled from the land to the sky and from the sky to other
planets, until he reached the limits of the universe, but Våkäsura continued
to chase him. The predominating deities of higher planets, such as Brahmä,
Indra and Candra, were not able to save him from the impending danger,
and finally he approached Kåñëa’s incarnation, Lord Viñëu in Çvetadvépa.
In order to protect his devotee, Lord Viñëu appeared as a perfect
brahmacäré, and the effulgence emanating from his body was attractive to
both Çiva and the demon. After stopping Våkäsura by offering obeisances to
him, and winning his confidence by speaking sweet and reassuring words,
Lord Viñëu asked, “Why are you running after Çiva?”
Våkäsura replied, “He has given me the benediction that when I put my hand
on someone’s head it will split open. Now I will use the benediction on him.”
Lord Viñëu in the dress of a brahmacäré said, “You are very foolish. You
believe the benediction of this man who smokes gaïjä, takes all types of
intoxication and lives in crematoriums? Do you believe that he is authorized
and powerful enough to give benedictions? His benediction will prove futile.
He is just fooling you. You are running after him, but in the end you will
find that his benediction is ineffective. Try it on yourself; put your hand on
your head. You will see that nothing happens.”
Våkäsura agreed, “Yes, I will try.”
In this way, by Lord Viñëu’s sweet words and by the expansion of his
illusory energy, the demon became bewildered. He forgot the power of Lord
Çiva and his benediction. He therefore put his hand on his own head, it
immediately split open, and he died.
This pastime gives evidence that Lord Çiva is not independent; his
worshipable Deity is Kåñëa.12
Çiva’s Benefactor
All the pastimes performed by Çiva are meant to teach everyone about
Çré Kåñëa’s supremacy, and to inspire everyone to serve Him and take shelter
of Him. The following history is another example of this.
The demigods once fought with the demons and defeated them. The
demons then took shelter of their leader, Maya Dänava, who then prepared
three mystic airplane-like residences for them. The demons thus began to
vanquish all the planetary systems.
Thereafter, when the demons began to destroy the higher planetary
systems, the rulers of those planets went to Lord Çiva, surrendered unto him
and said, “Dear Lord, we demigods are about to be vanquished. We are your
followers. Kindly save us.”
Lord Çiva reassured them and said, “Do not be afraid.” He fixed his
arrows to his bow and released them toward the three residences occupied by
the demons, and all the demons were killed. The great mystic Maya Dänava
then dropped the bodies of the demons into a nectarean well he had created,
making the demons return to life and become practically invincible.
Çiva became very worried. Seeing this, Lord Kåñëa in His form as Lord
Viñëu considered how to help him destroy the demons. Lord Viñëu became
a cow and Lord Brahmä became a calf, and they entered the residences and
drank all the nectar in the well. Then, by His personal potency of religion,
knowledge, renunciation, opulence, austerity, education and so on, Kåñëa
equipped Lord Çiva with everything he needed for the battle. He manifested
a chariot, a charioteer, a flag, horses, elephants, a bow, a shield and arrows,
and Lord Çiva sat down on the chariot to fight. He destroyed the three
residences of the demons, the inhabitants of the higher planets glorified and
worshipped him, and he became known as Tripuräri, the annihilator of the
three dwellings of the demons.
So don’t fear. Kåñëa will save you if you offer yourself to Him. He
Himself has promised this in Bhagavad-gétä. If you hand over your complete
responsibility in life to Him – not only your bodily maintenance, but your
intelligence, your senses and everything else you possess – He will take full
care and responsibility for you. Don’t fear. No suffering or sorrow of any
kind will be able to touch you. Moreover, you will be able to enter the realm
of bhakti and be happy forever.
Çiva’s Worshipable Deity
Further evidence of Lord Çiva’s relationship with Kåñëa in the Supreme
Lord’s pastimes of majesty is found in the history of Aniruddha. Aniruddha
is the grandson of Lord Kåñëa, and he wanted to marry the daughter of
Bäëäsura, a demonic person who was a staunch devotee of Lord Çiva. By the
blessings of Lord Çiva, Bäëäsura had one thousand arms, and he served Lord
Çiva with all of them. He assisted Çiva’s famous dancing by rhythmically
12 “Thus by the grace of the Supreme Personality of Godhead Näräyaëa, who is
transcendental to all material qualities, Lord Çiva was saved from being killed
by a demon. Anyone who hears this history with faith and devotion is certainly
liberated from material entanglement as well as from the clutches of his enemies.”
(Kåñëa, Chapter 88)

26 ÇIVA-TATTVA THREE CONSIDERATIONS 27
beating drums with his one thousand hands, and he thus received the
benediction of protection from his enemies.
Kåñëa was informed by Çré Närada that Bäëäsura and his army had
fought with and arrested Aniruddha for intimately meeting with Bäëäsura’s
daughter, Üñä. Therefore, in order to save Aniruddha, He called upon
His own army, the Yadu dynasty, and advanced on Bäëäsura’s city. When
Bäëäsura saw Lord Kåñëa’s army, he immediately ordered his men to fight.
Lord Çiva arrived there at that time, but instead of praying to his Lord,
he apparently took the side of his own devotee, Bäëäsura. He personally
began fighting with Kåñëa as Bäëäsura’s commander-in-chief. He shot many
weapons at Kåñëa, including his Päçupata-astra and his ultimate weapon,
the Çiva-jvara, but all of them failed.
During the battle, Bäëäsura showered his weapons upon Çré Kåñëa with
his one thousand arms. Kåñëa then cut off his arms with His Sudarçana
cakra, leaving him with only four. Finally Lord Çiva, realizing that he was
helpless to save his devotee, surrendered to Lord Kåñëa and offered his
heartfelt prayers.13
After hearing Çiva’s prayers, Lord Kåñëa told him that because Bäëäsura
was the son of Bali Mahäräja and the great-grandson of Prahläda Mahäräja,
and because he was favored by Lord Çiva himself, He would not only spare
Bäëäsura’s life, but would give him immortality.
Çiva Takes Shelter
According to Çrémad-Bhägavatam and Skanda Puräëa, when Kåñëa
resided in Dvärakä, He often assumed His form as four-handed Väsudeva.
In fact, He was famous there as such. At that time there was a king
named Pauëòraka, who had attached two artificial arms on his body and
declared, “Kåñëa is not the four-handed Väsudeva. I am that Väsudeva.”
He sent a messenger to Çré Kåñëa with the declaration, “Stop claiming to be
four-handed Väsudeva. I am He.” After Lord Kåñëa and His royal family
laughed for a considerable time, the Lord sent a reply to the challenge and
prepared to fight.
13 “Çukadeva Gosvämé assured King Parékñit that the narration of the fight between
Lord Çiva and Lord Kåñëa is not at all inauspicious, like ordinary fights. On the
contrary, if one remembers in the morning the narration of this fight between
Lord Kåñëa and Lord Çiva, and takes pleasure in the victory of Lord Kåñëa, he
will never experience defeat anywhere in his struggle of life.” (Kåñëa, Chapter 63)
The King of Käçé was a staunch devotee of Lord Çiva, and he took the
side of Pauëòraka Väsudeva. He had previously received a benediction from
Lord Çiva to be able to defeat Kåñëa in combat, but in this battle he was
not only defeated, but killed. With the assistance of His Sudarçana cakra
Çré Kåñëa killed Pauëòraka, and by His arrows He killed the king of Käçé.
Having cut off the head of the king, He then arranged to throw it into the
city of Käçé.
The King had a son named Sudakñiëa, who was determined to avenge
the death of his father. Sudakñiëa thus worshiped the lord of Käçé, Viçvanätha
– Lord Çiva – who then instructed him to perform a special ritualistic
ceremony that calls forth a fire demon for the purpose of killing one’s
enemy. Lord Çiva also sanctioned his ghostly companions to accompany the
fire demon, and Dvärakä then fell under attack.
Kåñëa called for his Sudarçana cakra, which froze the demon and forced
him to return to Käçé and destroy his creators. Moreover, following behind
the demon, the Sudarçana cakra burned the entire city to ashes.
At that time even Lord Çiva himself had to run from the city. Where his
deerskin fell, he did not know. He also left his trident and everything else,
including his wife, and quickly fled. He arrived at a place in Navadvépa14 called
Harihara-kñetra, and there he took shelter of Çré Caitanya Mahäprabhu.15
14 Lord Nityänanda said, “To the west of the Alakananda River see Käçé, where
the followers of Çiva and his consort endeavor for liberation. This Navadvépa Käçé,
however, is superior to the other Käçé. Here, Çiva is always dancing and chanting
the name of Gauranga [Caitanya Mahäprabhu], begging his followers to accept
devotion to Mahäprabhu. The renunciates who live for a thousand years in Käçé
may attain liberation through the cultivation of knowledge leading to impersonal
liberation, but here the devotees kick away that liberation as they dance and chant
the name of Gauräìga. While leaving the body here, living entities are delivered
by Lord Çiva, who chants the name of Gauräìga in their ears. This abode is thus
called Mahä-Väräëasé, for here there is no fear of death.” (Çré Navadvépa-Mähätmya
by Çréla Bhaktivinoda Öhäkura)
15 The identy of Çré Caitanya Mahäprabhu is given as follows: “According to the
Vedic literature, the foremost occupational duty for humanity in this Age of Kali
is näma-saìkértana, or congregational chanting of the holy name of the Lord.
The incarnation for this age especially preaches this process, but only Kåñëa
Himself can explain the confidential loving service performed in the four
principal varieties of loving affairs between the Supreme Lord and His devotees.
Lord Kåñëa therefore personally appeared, with His plenary portions, as Lord
Caitanya.” (Çré Caitanya-caritämåta, Ädi-lélä, Chapter 3 Summary)


28 ÇIVA-TATTVA THREE CONSIDERATIONS 29
From Navadvépa he went to Ekämra-känana (now Bhuvaneçvara) near Puré,
in Orissa, where he took shelter of Çré Kåñëa in His form as Lord Jagannätha.
This pastime is aiçvarya-gata-vicära, and it also reveals that the worshipable
Deity of Lord Çiva is Çré Caitanya Mahäprabhu, or Çré Kåñëa.
Service in Human-like Pastimes
Lord Rämacandra’s worship of Lord Çiva is an example of naravatagata-
vicära – a sweet, human-like pastime. As stated earlier, Räma played
the role of an ordinary human being who had to perform the difficult task
of crossing the ocean to reach Laìkä, and he worshiped Lord Çiva for the
power to do this.
Lord Räma established a liìga of Rämeçvara Mahädeva and began
worshiping him, thinking, “By Lord Çiva’s mercy I can cross the sea.”
Actually he was powerful enough to personally jump across the ocean in a
second, but he was playing a role to inspire ordinary people. The common
people present considered that Rämeçvara Mahädeva was in fact the lord
of Räma, and that was why his name was Rämeçvara. The demigods then
appeared and declared, “Rämeçvara Mahädeva and Räma are both the same.
There is no difference between them. Both are éçvara; both are God, the
Supreme Lord. Ordinary people think only that Rämeçvara is the lord of
Räma, but they are not intelligent. It is not like that.” At that moment Lord
Çiva manifested from the liìga and said, “No. Try to understand this truth.
Rämeçvara means ‘He whose Lord is Räma.’ Räma is my Lord!”
The pastimes of Lord Räma are found in Rämäyaëa, Çrémad-Bhägavatam,
the Puräëas and Räma-carita-mänasa, and they take place in a previous Age,
called Tretä-yuga. The demonic king Rävaëa had kidnapped Lord Räma’s
wife, Sétä-devé, and taken her to Laìkä. Before Räma knew where Sétä had
been taken, he was weeping profusely, and Lakñmaëa was trying to console
him. The more Lakñmaëa tried to pacify him, however, the more bitterly he
wept. In this state of mind, he was beseeching the trees and creatures of the
forest, and even the Godävaré River. He appealed to the trees of Panjätavi
forest, “O Panjätavi, have you seen Sétä? Where has she gone? O deer, have
you seen Sétä? O Godävaré, have you seen my dear Sétä? Why has she left
me?” Lord Räma became maddened from inconsolable grief.
At this time Lord Çiva and his wife Saté came to Daëòakäraëya Forest,
where Lord Räma had been living with Sétä and His brother Lakñmaëa for
fourteen years, following the order of His father, King Daçaratha. Çiva was
thus present to witness Lord Räma’s divine pastimes, and seeing them, he
was moved; his heart melted. He offered full obeisances, with all the limbs of
his body touching the ground, and glorified Räma: “Oh! These pastimes are
so beautiful and marvelous that they will melt the heart of anyone who sees
them.” He then circumambulated the outer precincts of that area, weeping
due to the transcendental emotions of grief in separation exhibited in his
Lord’s pastimes.
Offering his final respects, Çiva was ready to return to Kailäsa, when
Saté asked him, “My dear husband, to whom are you offering obeisances?”
Lord Çiva replied, “Çré Räma is my worshipful Deity. I worship him always.”
Saté said, “I see that Räma is like an ordinary man weeping for his wife. Even
I know where Sétä is, but he does not know? Why is he grieving? He appears
to be a weak person. Is he not strong enough to bring Sétä back? He must be
an ordinary man, not God. Why are you honoring him so?”
“You are ignorant,” Lord Çiva told his doubting wife. “You do not
understand that Räma is the Supreme Personality of Godhead.” He told her
that if she did not believe him she could conduct a test of some sort, to
determine Çré Räma’s position.
Lord Çiva rested under a banyan tree a little distance away, and Saté,
by her inherent mystic power, changed to a form like Sétä’s. She went to the
area where Çré Räma was piteously searching for Sétä. She thought that if
she would appear before Räma as Sétä, he would come and embrace her in
joyous relief, believing that he had found His wife. However, although she
appeared before him again and again, He ignored her each time. He simply
looked away. Finally he said to her, “Mother, why are you roaming alone
here in the forest? Where is your husband, Çiva?”
Saté became astonished and fearful, and wondered how Räma knew
who she really was. She knelt in reverence, and at that time she no longer
saw the trees, plants, and wildlife of the forest as before. She saw Sétä-Räma
everywhere and in everything. Wherever she looked in the forest – here,
there and everywhere – she saw only Sétä-Räma, Sétä-Räma, Sétä-Räma.
In this manner, Çré Räma showed Saté that he and Sétä are eternally
inseparable, that he was performing this dramatic pastime to captivate the
minds of human beings by its remembrance, and that he is, in fact, the
Personality of Godhead. She reflected, “My husband is never ignorant. He
was right and I was wrong.” Rising to her feet, she saw that Räma was still
there alone in the forest with Lakñmaëa, weeping, “Oh Sétä, where are you,
where are you?”
Then, reassuming her own form, she returned to the spot where Çiva
was waiting under the banyan tree. He asked her, “Did you test him to see
who he is?”


30 ÇIVA-TATTVA THREE CONSIDERATIONS 31
Saté lied, “Most respected husband, I believed you; so there was no
need to test him.”
Lord Çiva saw in a trance what had actually happened and silently
vowed, “Saté has taken the form of Sétä, my mother; therefore she is no
longer my wife. She is now my mother, and from now on I will treat her as
such.”
When he made this vow, the demigods at once showered flowers from
heaven, and they praised him, “You have made a remarkable vow.”
Saté asked, “What vow did you make?”
Çiva remained silent.
The bona fide disciple always has faith in his self-realized guru. Lord
Çiva was the Guru of Saté, but she had not believed him when he told her
that Räma is the Supreme Personality of Godhead. If a disciple does not obey
his gurudeva, his bhakti and spiritual life will diminish. If a disciple lies to his
gurudeva, he again goes to hell.
When Lord Çiva and Saté-devé returned to their cottage in Kailäsa, Çiva
placed her seat facing him. In Vedic culture a wife sits on the left side of
her husband and a mother, respected as guru, sits in front of her son, facing
him.
A disciple does not offer obeisance to his gurudeva from his guru’s right
or left side, but always in front of him. A true disciple does not remain silent,
but respectfully asks relevant questions of his guru and serves him. He does
not ask questions in a challenging mood, but rather to learn. It is stated in
Bhagavad-gétä (4.34):
tad viddhi praëipätena
paripraçnena sevayä
upadekñyanti te jïänaà
jïäninas tattva-darçinaù
Just try to learn the truth by approaching a spiritual master.
Inquire from him submissively and render service unto him. The selfrealized
souls can impart knowledge unto you because they have seen
the truth.
Lord Çiva entered a trance for thousands of years, and Saté felt severe
separation from him. She thought, “Çiva has left me. He is treating me like
his mother because I took the form of Sétä. As long as I am in this body he
will not accept me as his wife, so I will have to give up this body.”
After some time, Saté’s father Dakña, the son of Lord Brahmä and great
progenitor of the universe, began a sacrifice. Although every sacrifice is
intended to please the Supreme Lord Viñëu, all the demigods, especially
Lord Brahmä, Lord Çiva and the other principal demigods, are invited and
take part. However, Lord Çiva was not invited to Dakña’s sacrifice.
The chaste Saté heard the heavenly denizens, who were flying in the
sky, speaking about the great sacrifice being performed by her father. She
saw that the wives of the heavenly denizens, dressed in fine clothing, were
coming from all directions and were going to the sacrifice. She approached
her husband and said, “My dear Lord, your father-in-law is now performing
a great sacrifice. All the demigods who were invited by him are going. If you
desire, we may also go.”
Lord Çiva warned her not to go, due to her father’s enmity and envy
towards him – an enmity that had begun long before, in a former Age. Lord
Çiva now remembered his father-in-law’s harsh words spoken at that time.
Çiva had come to Dakña’s council, where Dakña was being honored by many
leaders of the universe. Dakña’s daughter was married to Lord Çiva, so he
considered Çiva to be like his son. He offered obeisances to Brahmä because
Brahmä was his father, but he did not show any respect to Çiva. Lord Brahmä
welcomed Dakña, but Çiva was absorbed in meditation and chanting the
mahä-mantra: “Hare Kåñëa Hare Kåñëa Kåñëa Kåñëa Hare Hare, Hare Räma
Hare Räma Räma Räma Hare Hare.”
Insulted by Çiva’s apparent neglect and considering himself Çiva’s
superior, Dakña publically criticized him. Many incidents took place as
a result of that, and Çiva returned to Kailäsa. Previous to this, Dakña had
often criticized Çiva, being disturbed that his daughter had married such an
‘inferior person’, but after this incident he considered Çiva his enemy. Lord
Çiva, on the other hand, had never felt enmity towards Dakña.
Now Lord Çiva told Saté, “A woman can go without an invitation to see
her guru or her father and mother, but if her father thinks that her husband
is his enemy, then she should not go to see him. You know that your father
thinks I am his enemy, although I have never considered him as such.”
Despite her husband’s words, Saté was determined to go. She went,
but upon her arrival she observed Dakña dishonoring him. She angrily
condemned her father and glorified Lord Çiva in front of all present. Then,
while meditating on Lord Çiva’s holy lotus feet, she gave up her body in a
mystic fire that manifested from her heart.
By quitting her body, Saté was able to disconnect herself from her
offensive father and transfer herself to another body in order to associate
with Lord Çiva without that contamination. However, her main motive was
to become free from the result of her own offenses, and again be accepted
as Lord Çiva’s beloved wife. In her next life she took birth as Pärvaté, the


32 ÇIVA-TATTVA THREE CONSIDERATIONS 33
daughter of the Himälayas. In that birth she performed austerities for many
years and achieved her desired goal.
Here we see that Çiva’s worshipable Deity is Räma, and because Saté
took the form of Sétä-devé, he left her. He is a chaste Vaiñëava, always
serving Lord Kåñëa and Lord Räma. Saté-devé is also a pure devotee. She is
the Supreme Lord’s divine energy, but she was playing a role in order to give
lessons to ordinary persons.
Both Çiva and Saté served in Lord Räma’s human-like pastimes. Rävaëa
had not actually taken the real Sétä. He was not able to touch her. He could
only take a mäyä-sétä. The real Sétä, the transcendental potency of Räma,
was taken away and protected by the lord of fire, Agnideva. Räma’s crying
and asking each and every plant, tree, mountain and river, “Where is my
Sétä?” was an exhibition of his human-like pastimes.
The great saint Tulsédäsa has written in his Räma-carita-mänasa that
we should accept Çré Çiva-Pärvaté as our Guru, and they will give us love for
the lotus feet of Räma. Those who worship Çiva as an independent lord are
like Våkäsura. They want to have sense gratification with Kåñëa’s potency.
Instead of becoming Våkäsura, we should become devotees, and consider
Çiva-Pärvaté as our Guru in the matter of devotion to the Supreme Lord.
Consider further the identity of Lord Çiva’s worshipable Deity. Çiva’s
mantra is Räma, and he always chants the holy name of Räma. To whom does
this refer? Although this also refers to Çré Sétä-Räma, the name he actually
chants is that of Müla-Saìkarñaëa, Balaräma, the first expansion of Lord
Kåñëa. Çré Rämacandra is also an expansion of the original Räma – Balaräma
– but the factual worshipable Deity of Lord Çiva is Balaräma.
Ultimately, in the Hare Kåñëa mahä-mantra, Räma does not refer to
Daçaratha’s son Räma, nor to Paraçuräma or Balaräma. Lord Rämacandra,
Lord Paraçuräma and Lord Balaräma are all manifestations of Çré Rädhäramaëa.
Hare Kåñëa Hare Kåñëa
Kåñëa Kåñëa Hare Hare,
Hare Räma Hare Räma
Räma Räma Hare Hare
The meaning of Räma here is Rädhä-ramaëa, Çré Kåñëa who engages
in ramaëa with Rädhä. Ramaëa means playing or enjoying. Kåñëa enjoys
playful pastimes with Rädhäräëé, and He is therefore called Ramaëa or
Räma.
No Lust in Lord Çiva
The following history is another example of naravata-gata-vicära,
or madhurya-gata-vicära. There is also some tattva-gata-vicära here,
and altogether it is a nectar cup-full of madhurya (sweetness) and tattva
(philosophical truth) – tasting very good.
Lord Çiva is immensely powerful and he has no lust. He may even
be naked, and his wife Pärvaté may also be sitting naked on his lap, but
they have no lusty desires. If an ordinary girl and boy stay close together,
especially without clothes, lust will enter their hearts. However, this falldown
does not take place in the hearts of Lord Çiva and Pärvaté-devé under any
circumstance.
In this regard, a transcendental pastime is described in the Sixth Canto
of Çrémad-Bhägavatam. Lord Çiva was once giving a lecture in an assembly of
great saintly persons, Pärvaté was sitting on his lap, and both of them were
completely naked. At that time the exalted devotee King Citraketu came and
said in a friendly way, “Just see the position in which you are giving your
lecture.” Pärvaté thought that he was criticizing Lord Çiva. Disturbed by the
thought that anyone would think Lord Çiva has lusty desires in his heart,
she cursed him.
King Citraketu was on friendly terms with Lord Çiva, and because
Citraketu’s Guru is also Müla-Saìkarñaëa, he and Çiva were god-brothers.
He never meant to say that lust was in Çiva’s heart. He was simply saying that
this was not the standard way to deliver a lecture.
Lord Çiva chastized Pärvaté and said, “Why did you curse him? He
is an exalted devotee. Look at his advancement in bhakti. Although he is
quite competent to revoke your curse and curse you in retaliation, he has
readily accepted your curse. This is his greatness – this is the behavior of a
Vaiñëava.”
Lust cannot remain near Lord Çiva. Neither Lord Sadäçiva nor his
partial manifestation of Çiva who stays with Pärvaté have lust in their hearts.
When Kämadeva, Cupid, once came to disturb Lord Çiva’s meditation, Çiva
simply opened his third eye and burned him to ashes.
How could it happen then, that Lord Çiva was attracted to the beautiful
form of Mohiné-mürti? Mohiné is an incarnation of Lord Kåñëa Himself, and
He can do anything. It was Lord Kåñëa who personally created the attraction
within Lord Çiva’s heart, and He who showed him this form of Mohiné.
In the course of serving Kåñëa’s pastimes, His internal bewildering energy,
yogamäyä, is so strong that it can do anything.


 34 ÇIVA-TATTVA THREE CONSIDERATIONS 35
In October of 2001, Çréla Näräyaëa Mahäräja took a party of six hundred
pilgrims, including over two hundred Westerners, to the sacred and beautiful town
of Jagannätha Puré on the east coast of Orissa. One of the many holy sites visited
by the pilgrims was the temple of Lord Çiva in his form as Lokanätha Mahädeva.
Arriving at the site, the pilgrims passed through a large gate that lead to a
courtyard. On the right of the courtyard there was a beautiful pond and on the left
there were some shops selling sweets and other items for worship.
As is the case with many Indian temples, the management of the temple of
Lokanätha Mahädeva did not allow Westerners to enter. Therefore, Çréla Näräyaëa
Mahäräja and the Indian devotees went into the temple while the Western devotees
waited patiently in the courtyard. After a few minutes, Çréla Näräyaëa Mahäräja
came out of the temple alone and sat down on a slab platform in front of one of the
little shops. He was immediately surrounded by the Western devotees, eager to hear
him speak, and the following is a transcription of his talk:
Lord Çiva is a most exalted devotee of the Supreme Lord Kåñëa.
He always faithfully serves Lord Kåñëa and all His incarnations such as
Lord Räma, Lord Nåsiàha, Lord Kalki, and Lord Varäha.
In this world, Lord Çiva has five different kinds of manifestations:
earth, water, fire, air and ether – of which our body, the Earth and the
universe are made. He is also qualified to personally appear from forms
composed of these five elements, in order to serve his Master.
You have no ability to see anything other than these five elements.
Now you cannot see the soul, which is your self. If you develop bhakti,
pure loving devotion to Çré Kåñëa, then you will see Him; and by His
light you will see your own soul.
We went inside the temple but we simply saw a room full of water,
so there was no need of going inside. You are fortunate to be out here
at this big pond called Gauré-kuëòa, which is a symbol of Lord Çiva.
You can touch this pond, perform äcamana, and you can offer your
obeisances here. In Bengal and other places there are also ambu-liìgas
(liìgas made of water), and Çiva is worshipped in that form.
Indian devotees are fortunate to see the deity and offer arati
(worship), whereas the Western devotees are not given permission
to enter the temple. Because of this, the Western devotees have an
opportunity to come to Lokanätha Mahädeva in a mood of great
humility – thinking themselves to be very low and fallen. In fact, if they

36 ÇIVA-TATTVA GATEKEEPER TO THE ABODE OF LOVE 37
come with this mood, they are even more fortunate than those devotees
who went inside. If you are out here crying to Lokanätha – Gopéçvara
Mahädeva – praying, “Please be merciful to me,” he will come to you first,
and he will sprinkle his mercy upon you. Lord Çiva is a manifestation of
Lord Kåñëa, and as such, he is always hungry for love and affection. If
you are crying and thinking, “We are very unfortunate,” Lord Kåñëa will
personally come to you. He is very merciful, so do not worry that you
cannot go inside. You are most lucky.
Wherever Kåñëa resides, Sadäçiva Viñëu is always present. In
Mathurä and all other places where there is a temple of Kåñëa or any
Viñëu Deity, Sadäçiva as Lokanätha or Gopéçvara Mahädeva will be there
– to serve the Supreme Lord’s abode. Çiva serves Kåñëa everywhere; he
is always in Kailäsa, always in Käçé, and always in Bhubaneçvara. It
seems from worldly, external vision that he sometimes leaves one place
and goes to another, but this is not the real truth.
In his pastimes he shifted from Kailäsa to Käçé. While in Käçé
he assisted the atheist King Käçiräja and the king’s friend Pauëòraka
Väsudeva, who artificially became four-armed and challenged Lord
Kåñëa. In the battle that ensued, Lord Kåñëa severed the heads of both
Pauëòraka Väsudeva and the king of Käçé, who had considered himself
one of Lord Çiva’s best servants. The king’s master, however, could not
save him when Lord Kåñëa’s Sudarçana cakra burnt down Käçé.
Seeing his city in flames, Lord Çiva fled. After some time he
arrived in Ekämra-känana in Bhubaneçvara and took shelter of Lord
Jagannätha. Lord Jagannätha told him, “Never fear. Because you have
come under my shelter, I will give you the post of Lokanätha, “the
protector of my abode.” If anyone comes to this holy place and takes
my transcendental association without taking yours, his coming here
will not be complete. He must come to your place after visiting me,
and then his mission here will be accomplished and he will become
happy.”
Lord Çiva is extremely kind by nature, and he is the abode of
love. In this regard, Çréla Viçvanätha Cakravarté Öhäkura has written
(Saìkalpa-kalpadruma 103):
våndävanävani-pate! jaya soma soma-maule
sanaka-sanandana-sanätana-näradeòya
gopéçvara! vraja-viläsi-yugäìghri-padme
prema prayaccha nirupädhi namo namas te
O gatekeeper of Våndävana! O Soma, all glories to you! O you
whose forehead is decorated with the moon, and who is worshipable
by the sages headed by Sanaka, Sanandana, Sanätana and Närada!
O Gopéçvara! Desiring that you bestow upon me prema, divine
love for the lotus feet of Çré Rädhä-Mädhava, who perform joyous
pastimes in Vraja-dhäma, I offer obeisances unto you time and
again.
We pray, “O Lord Çiva, even great personalities like Çré Närada Muni
and the four Kumäras worship you. You can give love and affection like
that of the gopés. In your purest form of Gopéçvara Mahädeva, you are
very powerful. You are hari-hara-eka-ätmä, which means that Kåñëa has
become your ätmä and you have become His ätmä.”
Here, ätmä means dearmost or very beloved, so Lord Kåñëa and Lord
Çiva are one at heart. Lord Çiva serves the Supreme Lord as Hanuman,
as Bhéma, as Madhväcärya, as Advaita Äcärya at the time of Çré Caitanya
Mahäprabhu, and in so many other forms.
We have come here to beg for the mercy of Lokanätha, but personally
I don’t see Lokanätha here. I see Gopéçvara Mahädeva, of whom Lokanätha
is an expansion.
Please repeat after me: [Çréla Näräyaëa Mahäräja uttered each
half line of the above-mentioned Sanskrit prayer alone, and the assembled
pilgrims responded in unison. Then he shared with them its deep and intimate
purport:]
We pray, “O Gopéçvara Mahädeva, we have come to you. Here your
name is changed. You have manifested as Lokanätha, but we don’t know
you as Lokanätha. We only know you as Gopéçvara Mahädeva. You cannot
cheat us by hiding from us. You can cheat demons like Rävaëa, Kaàsa,
Jaräsandha and others, but you can never cheat us. This is because we
have taken shelter of Yogamäyä Paurëamäsé. If you cheat us, we will have
to complain to Paurëamäsé, and she will ‘punish’ you. Do you remember
when all the gopés slapped your cheeks so much that your cheeks became
swollen? Kindly remember this.” [See page 8, footnote 3]
Pleased by the love expressed in this prayer, Lord Çiva will appear in
his form of Gopéçvara Mahädeva. He will be very helpful, and happy to
give mercy.

38 ÇIVA-TATTVA GATEKEEPER TO THE ABODE OF LOVE 39
Lokanätha Mahädeva ké jaya!
Çré Çré Gopéçvara Mahädeva ké jaya!
Kämeçvara Mahädeva ké jaya!
Nandéçvara Mahädeva ké jaya!
Cakaleçvara Mahädeva ké jaya!
Pärvaté-pati ké jaya!
Çré Çré Çaìkara ké jaya!
Hara Hara Hara Hara Mahädeva ké jaya!
I have shared something special with you. As you are sitting outside
and feeling separation from Lord Çiva, he will surely sprinkle his mercy






Om Tat Sat
                                                        
(Continued...)

(My humble salutations to  the lotus feet of  Swami jis great Devotees , Philosophic Scholars, Purebhakti dot com       for the collection)