Tīrtha-māhātmya and Rudra’s Samanvaya Teaching
Maṅkaṇaka Episode
अहं सहस्रनयनः सर्वात्मा सर्वतोमुखः / दाहकः सर्वपापानां कालः कालकरो हरः
ahaṃ sahasranayanaḥ sarvātmā sarvatomukhaḥ / dāhakaḥ sarvapāpānāṃ kālaḥ kālakaro haraḥ
أنا ذو الألف عين؛ أنا الذات الكلية، ووجهي إلى كل الجهات. أُحرق جميع الآثام؛ أنا الزمان، وصانع الزمان، وأنا هَرَا، المُزيل.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching in the Ishvara-Gita style, expressing the Supreme as Hara (Shiva-Vishnu unity)
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It identifies the Supreme as sarvātmā—the indwelling Self of all—omni-present (sarvatomukhaḥ) and all-seeing (sahasranayanaḥ), indicating a single Consciousness pervading every being.
The verse supports Pāśupata-style contemplation of Īśvara as all-pervading and sin-burning (dāhakaḥ sarvapāpānām), encouraging meditation on the Lord’s omniscience and the purification of karma through devotion, japa, and inner absorption.
Though spoken in a Vaishnava setting (Lord Kurma), the Supreme is explicitly named Hara, presenting the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis where the one Īśvara is understood through both Shiva and Vishnu epithets.