Īśvara-gītā: The Supreme Lord as Brahman, the Source of Creation, and the Inner Self
एवं हि यो वेद गुहाशयं परं प्रभुं पुराणं पुरुषं विश्वरूपम् / हिरण्मयं बुद्धिमतां परां गतिं स बुद्धिमान् बुद्धिमतीत्य तिष्ठति
evaṃ hi yo veda guhāśayaṃ paraṃ prabhuṃ purāṇaṃ puruṣaṃ viśvarūpam / hiraṇmayaṃ buddhimatāṃ parāṃ gatiṃ sa buddhimān buddhimatītya tiṣṭhati
هكذا، من عرف حقًّا الربّ الأعلى القابع في كهف القلب السرّي—البوروṣa (Puruṣa) القديم، السيّد ذو الصورة الكونية—المتألّق كالذهب، والغاية العليا لأهل الحكمة؛ صار ذا فطنةٍ حقّة، وإذا بلغ الفهم الكامل ثبت قائمًا في ذلك التحقّق.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching in the Ishvara Gita discourse
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the Supreme as the inner Indweller (guhāśaya) who is also the cosmic Person (puruṣa, viśvarūpa): transcendent yet present within the heart, known by direct realization rather than mere intellect.
The verse points to inward contemplation on the Lord in the “heart-cave,” aligning with meditative absorption (dhyāna/samādhi) central to the Kurma Purana’s Pashupata-oriented discipline: turning awareness inward to realize the luminous, all-pervading Ishvara.
By teaching one supreme, all-pervading Lord as the inner Self and universal form, the Ishvara Gita supports a non-sectarian synthesis: the same ultimate Ishvara is praised across Shaiva and Vaishnava idioms as the single highest reality.