Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
शान्तिः प्रभावती दीप्तिः पङ्कजायतलोचना / आद्या हृत्कमलोद्भूता गवां मता रणप्रिया
śāntiḥ prabhāvatī dīptiḥ paṅkajāyatalocanā / ādyā hṛtkamalodbhūtā gavāṃ matā raṇapriyā
সেই শান্তি, প্ৰভাবতী আৰু দীপ্তি—পদ্মায়ত নয়না। তেওঁ আদ্যা, হৃদয়কমলৰ পৰা উদ্ভূতা; গোৱালৈ মাতা বুলি মান্য, আৰু ৰণপ্ৰিয়া।
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching within the Ishvara Gita discourse
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
By locating the Divine Power as “born from the heart-lotus,” the verse points inward: realization is centered in the purified inner consciousness where Shakti’s peace and radiance become directly experienced.
It implicitly supports heart-lotus (hṛt-kamala) contemplation—an Ishvara Gita style interiorization—where the seeker steadies the mind in śānti (peace) and perceives dīpti (inner luminosity) as a sign of spiritual awakening.
In the Ishvara Gita’s synthetic vision, the same supreme divine potency (Shakti) is praised through multiple auspicious and protective aspects, aligning Shaiva-Shakta language within a Vishnu-as-Kurma teaching context—suggesting one reality expressed through complementary forms.