Avimukta-Māhātmya — Vyāsa in Vārāṇasī and Śiva’s Secret Teaching of Liberation
येन विब्रान्तचित्तानां योगिनां कर्मिणामपि / दृश्यो हि भगवान् सूक्ष्मः सर्वेषामथ देहिनाम्
yena vibrāntacittānāṃ yogināṃ karmiṇāmapi / dṛśyo hi bhagavān sūkṣmaḥ sarveṣāmatha dehinām
«وبذلك الوسيلة، حتى اليوغيون وأهل الأعمال الطقسية الذين ما تزال عقولهم مضطربة، يصير الربّ المبارك—وهو لطيفٌ دقيق—مُدرَكًا إدراكًا مباشرًا لجميع ذوي الأجساد.»
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing the inquiring sages/Indradyumna contextually within the Purva-bhaga discourse
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It presents Bhagavan/Īśvara as sūkṣma (subtle) yet directly knowable: realization is not merely sensory but arises through an inner means (discernment and yogic insight) that makes the Lord ‘seen’ even by embodied beings.
The verse points to a means (yena) by which perception of the subtle Lord becomes possible—implying disciplined yoga (mind-clarification, dhyāna, and viveka) that transforms a vibrānta (bewildered) mind into a fit instrument for Īśvara-darśana, aligning with Kurma Purana’s yoga-shāstra tone.
By emphasizing one subtle Bhagavan accessible through yogic realization rather than sectarian identity, it supports the Purana’s non-dual devotional-philosophical stance where Śaiva and Vaiṣṇava paths converge in direct realization of the one Īśvara.