Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
ब्रह्माणी बृहती ब्राह्मी ब्रह्मभूता भवारणिः / हिरण्मयी महारात्रिः संसारपरिवर्तिका
brahmāṇī bṛhatī brāhmī brahmabhūtā bhavāraṇiḥ / hiraṇmayī mahārātriḥ saṃsāraparivartikā
Sie ist Brahmāṇī, die Weite, die Brāhmī-Kraft—selbst zu Brahman geworden; das Feuer des Werdens. Golden strahlend ist sie die Große Nacht (Mahārātri) und die Macht, die das Rad des weltlichen Daseins dreht.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing King Indradyumna within the Ishvara Gita context
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
By calling the Goddess “brahmabhūtā” (become Brahman), the verse points to the non-dual ground where the Supreme reality is one—appearing as Shakti while remaining Brahman itself.
The verse supports Ishvara-Gita style contemplation: meditate on the Divine as both transcendent (Brahman) and immanent (the power moving saṃsāra). This aligns with Pāśupata-oriented devotion and inward discrimination that loosens identification with the turning wheel of becoming.
It presents a unifying theology: the Supreme spoken by Lord Kurma is Shakti-as-Brahman, a bridge concept through which Shaiva (Shakti/Maharatri) and Vaishnava (Vishnu teaching Brahman) strands converge in a non-dual framework.