Sūrya-vaṃśa Genealogy and the Supremacy of Tapas: Gāyatrī-Japa, Rudra-Darśana, and Śatarudrīya Upadeśa
वसिष्ठ उवाच अधीत्य वेदान् विधिवत् पुत्रानुत्पाद्य धर्मतः / इष्ट्वा यज्ञेश्वरं यज्ञैर् गच्छेद वनमथात्मवान्
vasiṣṭha uvāca adhītya vedān vidhivat putrānutpādya dharmataḥ / iṣṭvā yajñeśvaraṃ yajñair gaccheda vanamathātmavān
قال فَسِشْتَه: بعد أن يدرس الفيدات على الوجه المشروع، ويُنجب أبناءً وفق الدَّرما، ويعبد ربَّ القربان «يَجْنِيشْفَرا» بقرابين الياجْنا، فعلى المتحلّي بضبط النفس أن ينصرف بعد ذلك إلى الغابة سالكًا طور الفانابراستا.
Vasiṣṭha
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
It implies that true spiritual progress requires ātmavat—inner mastery—so that after fulfilling Vedic and social duties, one turns inward toward Self-realization through disciplined life in the forest stage.
The verse foregrounds a dharmic progression: Vedic study and yajña purify the mind, and vanaprastha supports tapas, restraint, and contemplation—foundational disciplines that mature into the yoga-oriented teachings later emphasized in the Kurma Purana.
By naming the deity as Yajñeśvara (Īśvara presiding over yajña), it uses a unifying theological title compatible with both Śaiva and Vaiṣṇava readings, reflecting the Kurma Purana’s synthesis where the one Lord is approached through Vedic rite and yogic innerization.