Manvantaras, Indras, Saptarṣis, and the Seven Sustaining Manifestations; Vyāsa as Nārāyaṇa
एका भगवतो मूर्तिर्ज्ञानरूपा शिवामला / वासुदेवाभिधाना सा गुणातीता सुनिष्कला
ekā bhagavato mūrtirjñānarūpā śivāmalā / vāsudevābhidhānā sā guṇātītā suniṣkalā
للبهاغافان صورةٌ واحدة—هي صورةُ المعرفة الخالصة، مباركةٌ طاهرةٌ بلا دنس. وتُسمّى تلك الصورة «فاسوديفا»، متجاوزةً للغونات، كاملةً غير مُجزّأة ولا منقسمة.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing the sages (Ishvara Gita discourse)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It identifies the Supreme as a single, pure-consciousness reality (jñānarūpa), stainless and beyond the three guṇas—pointing to the Atman/Brahman as nirguṇa and unaffected by material qualities.
The verse supports jñāna-yoga and the contemplative aim of Pāśupata-oriented discipline: meditation on the Lord as guṇātīta and niṣkala (partless), withdrawing attention from guṇa-based phenomena toward undivided consciousness.
By describing Vāsudeva as śiva (auspicious) and stainless, it frames the highest reality as shared in essence across Shaiva-Vaishnava language—Vishnu named Vāsudeva is taught with Shaiva technical descriptors, expressing a non-dual synthesis.