Om Shri Gurubhyo Namah, Jai Ma Adya, Jai Khyapa Parampara.
53. Kilbisa-Mocine
Remover of Sins and Liberator from Faults.
The fifty-third name, Kilbisa-Mocine, turns the mind toward one of Bhairava's most compassionate functions: purification. In ordinary life, fault leaves weight behind. Wrong action, confused intention, and accumulated karma do not disappear simply because one wishes to forget them. This name praises Kalabhairava as the power that can loosen that burden and free the devotee from what binds the heart.
Elaboration
The name is formed from kilbisa, sin, fault, or moral stain, and mocine or mocana, the liberator, releaser, or remover. In this form, Kalabhairava is praised as the one who removes the bonds created by transgression.
Remover of Sin
The word kilbisa points not only to outer wrongdoing, but also to the inner residue left by it: guilt, distortion, heaviness, and karmic obstruction. Bhairava's fierceness is important here. In Shaiva understanding, the fierce form is not merely destructive for its own sake. It destroys what has become spiritually harmful. To remember Kilbisa-Mocine is to remember that impurity can be burned away.
Liberation, Not Evasion
This name does not suggest that consequences are meaningless or that spiritual life is a way to avoid accountability. Rather, it points to a deeper grace. Through repentance, devotion, discipline, and surrender, the devotee is not left imprisoned inside past fault forever. Bhairava's liberation is a cleansing that restores clarity and makes sincere return possible.
What the Name Gives the Seeker
For the practitioner, Kilbisa-Mocine becomes a prayer for inward honesty. One brings error, weakness, and karmic burden before the Lord instead of hiding from them. The name teaches that Bhairava's compassion is not sentimental. It is purifying, exact, and freeing. What is false is burned away so that the soul may stand upright again on the path of dharma.
Spiritual Insight
Contemplating Kilbisa-Mocine reminds the seeker that no stain is stronger than Bhairava's power to purify, provided one comes forward with sincerity and the will to be transformed.