Naimittika-pralaya and the Theology of Kāla: Seven Suns, Saṃvartaka Fire, Flood, and Varāha Kalpa
क्षेत्रज्ञः प्रकृतिः कालो जगद्बीजमथामृतम् / माता पिता महादेवो मत्तो ह्यन्यन्न विद्यते
kṣetrajñaḥ prakṛtiḥ kālo jagadbījamathāmṛtam / mātā pitā mahādevo matto hyanyanna vidyate
أنا كْشِتْرَجْنْيَا (Kṣetrajña) عارفُ الحقل؛ وأنا بْرَكْرِتي (Prakṛti) وأنا الزمان (Kāla). أنا بذرةُ الكون، وأنا أيضًا أَمْرِتَا (Amṛta) الخلود. أنا الأمُّ والأب؛ أنا مهاديڤا (Mahādeva). وليس غيري شيءٌ موجود.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) speaking in the Ishvara-Gita voice of the Supreme Ishvara
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It identifies the Supreme as the kṣetrajña (inner witness-consciousness) and simultaneously as the cosmic principles (Prakṛti and Time), concluding with a non-dual claim: there is no reality apart from that one Ishvara.
The verse supports Ishvara-centric meditation: contemplating the Lord as the inner knower (kṣetrajña) and as the regulator of nature and time. This aligns with Pāśupata-oriented devotion and absorption where the yogin dissolves duality by fixing awareness on the single Supreme source.
By declaring “I am Mahādeva,” the speaker (Kurma/Vishnu as Ishvara) presents Śiva-tattva and Viṣṇu-tattva as one Supreme reality, a hallmark of the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis.