Tīrtha-māhātmya and Rudra’s Samanvaya Teaching
Maṅkaṇaka Episode
तीर्थं त्रैलोक्यविख्यातं ब्रह्मणः परमेष्ठिनः / पुष्करं सर्वपापघ्नं मृतानां ब्रह्मलोकदम्
tīrthaṃ trailokyavikhyātaṃ brahmaṇaḥ parameṣṭhinaḥ / puṣkaraṃ sarvapāpaghnaṃ mṛtānāṃ brahmalokadam
পুষ্কৰ পৰমেষ্ঠী ব্ৰহ্মাৰ তীৰ্থ, যি ত্ৰিলোকত বিখ্যাত। ই সকলো পাপ নাশ কৰে, আৰু তাত দেহত্যাগ কৰাসকলক ব্ৰহ্মলোক প্ৰদান কৰে।
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing sages/Indradyumna context on tīrtha-māhātmya
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Indirectly: it frames purification (sarva-pāpa-ghna) and higher attainment (Brahmaloka) as results of dharmic contact with a sacred locus, implying that inner elevation is supported by outer means (tīrtha) when aligned with scriptural order.
No specific yogic technique is named; the verse emphasizes tīrtha-sevā as a purificatory discipline—an auxiliary to sādhana—supporting mental clarity and merit, which in Kurma Purana complements vrata, japa, and higher contemplative paths.
This verse is primarily Brahmā-centered (Pushkara as Brahmā’s tīrtha), but within the Kurma Purana’s synthesis it fits the broader Purāṇic vision where Vishnu (as Kurma) teaches a dharma that honors multiple deities and sacred centers as harmonized supports for liberation-oriented life.