Narmadā–Tīrtha-Māhātmya: Sequence of Sacred Fords and Their Fruits
नर्मदायोत्तरे कूले तीर्थं परमशोभनम् / आदित्यायतनं रम्यमीश्वरेण तु भाषितम्
narmadāyottare kūle tīrthaṃ paramaśobhanam / ādityāyatanaṃ ramyamīśvareṇa tu bhāṣitam
Am Nordufer der Narmadā gibt es eine überaus strahlende Tīrtha: den lieblichen Schrein des Āditya, der Sonne, wie von Īśvara selbst verkündet.
Īśvara (as the authoritative divine narrator within the Kurma Purana’s tirtha-mahatmya discourse)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It does so indirectly: by naming the site as “spoken by Īśvara,” it grounds sacred geography in divine authority—suggesting that the Lord (Īśvara), immanent in holy places and deities like Āditya, is the ultimate sanctifier behind pilgrimage and inner realization.
The verse points to tīrtha-sevana—pilgrimage and worship at a consecrated shrine—as a supporting discipline: purification through sacred place, devatā-upāsanā (Sun worship), and reverent hearing/remembering of Īśvara’s teaching, which in the Kurma tradition complements Pāśupata-oriented sādhana.
By using the title “Īśvara” while praising an Āditya-shrine, it reflects the Purana’s integrative theology: divine speech and sanctity are attributed to the supreme Lord beyond sectarian limits, consistent with the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis.