Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
दक्षिणा दहना दाह्या सर्वभूतनमस्कृता / योगमाया विभावज्ञा महामाया महीयसी
dakṣiṇā dahanā dāhyā sarvabhūtanamaskṛtā / yogamāyā vibhāvajñā mahāmāyā mahīyasī
Sie ist Dakṣiṇā, die glückverheißende heilige Gabe; sie ist die brennende Kraft und auch das, was verbrannt werden soll. Von allen Wesen wird sie verehrt. Sie ist Yogamāyā, Kennerin aller Erscheinungen; Mahāmāyā — die überaus große und höchst ehrwürdige Macht.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching in the Ishvara Gita context
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
By describing Yogamāyā/Mahāmāyā as the power behind both the “burner” and the “burnt,” the verse implies that the apparent dualities of world-experience arise through divine Power; the Atman/Ishvara stands as the underlying reality while Māyā governs manifestation.
The verse points to Yogamāyā—suggesting yogic discernment (viveka) that recognizes how experiences and states (vibhāva) are shaped by Māyā. In the Ishvara Gita frame, this supports meditation on Ishvara with insight into the play of manifestation rather than attachment to its forms.
By foregrounding the single cosmic Shakti (Yogamāyā/Mahāmāyā) revered by all beings, the Kurma Purana advances a synthesis: the same supreme Power serves the one Ishvara honored in both Shaiva and Vaishnava idioms, softening sectarian boundaries through a non-dual theological lens.