oṃ namaste astu bhagavana
viśrveśrvarāya mahādevāya
tryambakāya tripurāntakāya
trikālāgnikālāya
kālāgnirudrāya nīlakaṇṭhāya mṛtyuṃjayāya
sarveśrvarāya sadāśivāya
śrīman mahādevāya namaḥ
Literal meaning:
Oh Lord, salutations to you
Oh Lord of the Universe, Greatest of them all
He who has three eyes, he who gives enlightenment which is beyond three worlds
He who like fire, devours all three times (Past, Present, Future) within himself
Like Time, he who ends everything, Vast like the blue sky, Over-powered of death
Lord of all Beings, Consciousness which is untouched by the world yet everything in the world is because of him.
Oh great Lord, salutations to you
1. Introduction
The mantra beginning with “oṃ namaste astu bhagavan” is one of the most comprehensive invocations of Lord Śiva found in Hindu liturgical and devotional traditions. Rather than focusing on a single aspect of Śiva, this mantra unfolds a theological panorama, addressing Him through a succession of powerful epithets that reveal His cosmic, ethical, psychological, and metaphysical dimensions.
This invocation is often recited in Śaiva pūjā, abhisheka rituals, Vedic-style prayers, and meditative contexts, particularly when seeking protection, healing, liberation from fear, or clarity of consciousness. Each name functions as a mantric lens, revealing a specific facet of Śiva’s role as creator, sustainer, destroyer, liberator, and ultimate reality.
This essay examines the mantra in depth through historical evolution, etymological analysis, word-by-word meaning, spiritual and psychological benefits, potential contraindications, and modern scientific perspectives, demonstrating how this ancient invocation remains profoundly relevant today.
2. Historical Background
2.1 Vedic and Rudra Origins
The roots of this mantra lie in the Vedic Rudra tradition, especially the Śrī Rudram (Namakam) of the Yajur Veda. Rudra is addressed there as:
- Terrible and benevolent
- Destroyer and healer
- Cosmic and intimate
Many names in this mantra—Tryambaka, Nīlakaṇṭha, Mṛtyuñjaya, Sarveśvara—appear directly or conceptually in Vedic hymns.
2.2 Purāṇic Expansion
During the Purāṇic period (c. 300–1200 CE), Śiva theology expanded dramatically. Śiva was identified as:
- Mahādeva – the supreme deity
- Sadāśiva – eternal, transcendent consciousness
- Viśveśvara – lord of the universe
The mantra reflects this synthesis of Vedic, Purāṇic, and Vedāntic Śaivism.
2.3 Liturgical Usage
This mantra is commonly used:
- At the beginning or conclusion of Śiva pūjā
- In Mṛtyuñjaya japa
- During Rudrābhiṣeka
- In times of illness, fear, or existential crisis
It is not sectarian; its scope is universal and metaphysical.
3. Etymology and Linguistic Foundations
3.1 Oṃ
The primordial sound symbolizing:
- Creation, sustenance, dissolution
- Waking, dreaming, deep sleep
- Brahman itself
3.2 Namaste Astu
- Namaḥ – surrender, reverent bow
- Te – to You
- Astu – let it be
Meaning: “May my salutations be offered unto You.”
This phrase dissolves ego and establishes humility.
3.3 Bhagavan
From bhaga (six divine attributes: sovereignty, power, glory, wealth, knowledge, detachment)
Bhagavan is one who possesses all divine excellences in fullness.
4. Word-by-Word Meaning and Commentary
viśveśvarāya
Viśva – universe
Īśvara – lord
Lord of the entire cosmos, transcending yet governing all existence.
mahādevāya
Mahā – great
Deva – luminous being
The supreme divinity, beyond lesser cosmic functions.
tryambakāya
Tri – three
Ambaka – eyes
Śiva’s three eyes symbolize:
- Sun, moon, fire
- Past, present, future
- Knowledge beyond duality
tripurāntakāya
Tripura – three cities (symbol of ego, mind, body)
Antaka – destroyer
Destroyer of egoic structures and false identity.
trikālāgnikālāya
Tri-kāla – three times
Agni-kāla – fire of time
Śiva as time itself, consuming all phenomena.
kālāgnirudrāya
Rudra as the fire of dissolution, annihilating ignorance and illusion.
nīlakaṇṭhāya
Nīla – blue
Kaṇṭha – throat
Śiva who holds poison in His throat—symbol of:
- Compassion
- Emotional containment
- Transforming toxicity without passing it on
mṛtyuṃjayāya
Mṛtyu – death
Jaya – victory
Conqueror of death, granting fearlessness and liberation.
sarveśvarāya
Lord of all beings and all laws—nothing lies outside His governance.
sadāśivāya
The eternally auspicious, unchanging reality beyond time and form.
śrīman mahādevāya namaḥ
Salutations to the glorious Supreme Śiva, radiant with divine abundance.
Integrated Meaning
“Oṃ. Salutations to You, O Bhagavan—Lord of the universe, Supreme Deity, three-eyed One, destroyer of the triple cities, embodiment of time and fire, fierce Rudra, blue-throated Lord, conqueror of death, ruler of all, eternal Sadāśiva—glorious Mahādeva, I bow to You.”
5. Philosophical Significance
5.1 Śiva as Totality
This mantra portrays Śiva not as a partial deity, but as:
- Time and timelessness
- Compassion and destruction
- Fear and fearlessness
- Form and formlessness
It aligns with Advaita Vedānta, where Śiva is identical with Brahman.
5.2 Death as Transformation
By invoking Mṛtyuñjaya, death is redefined—not as annihilation, but as transition and transcendence.
5.3 Ethics and Responsibility
Names like Tripurāntaka and Kālāgnirudra emphasize that ignorance, ego, and injustice are ultimately dissolved by truth.
6. Spiritual and Psychological Benefits
6.1 Fear Reduction
Regular recitation:
- Reduces fear of death
- Stabilizes emotions during crisis
- Cultivates existential courage
6.2 Emotional Alchemy
The Nīlakaṇṭha symbolism teaches:
- Holding pain consciously
- Processing anger and grief without harm
This is psychologically transformative.
6.3 Integration of Opposites
The mantra helps integrate:
- Fierce and gentle
- Active and silent
- Temporal and eternal
Leading to psychological wholeness.
7. Contraindications and Cautions
7.1 Mechanical Chanting
Without understanding or reverence, chanting may lose transformative depth.
7.2 Suppression Instead of Transformation
Invoking Nīlakaṇṭha should not encourage emotional suppression; awareness and processing are essential.
7.3 Avoidance of Responsibility
Seeking divine protection must not replace ethical accountability or medical care when needed.
8. Scientific and Contemporary Perspectives
8.1 Neuroscience of Mantra Chanting
Studies show:
- Mantra repetition activates parasympathetic nervous system
- Reduces cortisol and heart rate
- Enhances emotional regulation
8.2 Psychology of Archetypes
Śiva embodies universal archetypes:
- Destroyer of false structures
- Healer of poison
- Transcender of death
Engaging such archetypes strengthens resilience.
8.3 Time and Entropy
Śiva as Kāla resonates with:
- Thermodynamic entropy
- Cosmological cycles of creation and destruction
The mantra intuitively reflects cyclical cosmology.
9. Ritual and Meditative Application
Traditionally used:
- During Rudrābhiṣeka
- As a protective chant
- In contemplations on mortality and impermanence
Best practiced with:
- Slow rhythmic chanting
- Conscious breath
- Reflection on each name
10. Comparative Perspectives
- Christianity: God as Alpha and Omega
- Buddhism: Impermanence and liberation from fear
- Sufism: Divine names as pathways to realization
This mantra uniquely integrates cosmic power and intimate compassion.
11. Summary
The mantra “oṃ namaste astu bhagavan…” is a complete theological and psychological map of Śiva. It invokes Him as time, compassion, destroyer, healer, ruler, and eternal presence—revealing a vision of reality that is fearless, integrated, and transformative.
In a world marked by uncertainty and mortality, this mantra offers a profound reassurance:
That which destroys also protects; that which ends also liberates.
To bow to Mahādeva through this invocation is ultimately to bow to the deepest truth of existence itself—the awareness that transcends fear, time, and death.