Īśvara-Gītā (continued): Twofold Yoga, Aṣṭāṅga Discipline, Pāśupata Meditation, and the Unity of Nārāyaṇa–Maheśvara
वीतरागभयक्रोधा मन्मया मामुपाश्रिताः / बहवो ऽनेन योगेन पूता मद्भावमागताः
vītarāgabhayakrodhā manmayā māmupāśritāḥ / bahavo 'nena yogena pūtā madbhāvamāgatāḥ
Frei von Anhaftung, Furcht und Zorn—ganz in Mich versenkt und bei Mir Zuflucht nehmend—sind viele durch eben diesen Yoga gereinigt worden und haben Meinen Seinszustand erlangt.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching the Ishvara Gita
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents liberation as attaining “mad-bhāva”—a God-realized state where the practitioner’s consciousness becomes absorbed in the Supreme, purified of passion, fear, and anger, indicating identity-in-quality with the Lord through realization.
The verse emphasizes a refuge-based Yoga: inner renunciation (dropping rāga, bhaya, krodha), steady God-remembrance (manmayatā), and surrendered dependence on the Lord (upāśraya), culminating in purification and liberation.
Within the Ishvara Gita’s synthesis, “mad-bhāva” points to the one Supreme Ishvara realized through Yoga; the tradition reads this as harmonizing Shaiva and Vaishnava paths by centering on a single Lordhood attained through purification and devotion.