Īśvara-gītā: Vibhūtis of the Supreme Lord and the Paśu–Paśupati Doctrine of Bondage and Release
प्रजापतीनां दक्षो ऽहं निरृतिः सर्वरक्षसाम् / वायुर्बलवतामस्मि द्वीपानां पुष्करो ऽस्म्यहम्
prajāpatīnāṃ dakṣo 'haṃ nirṛtiḥ sarvarakṣasām / vāyurbalavatāmasmi dvīpānāṃ puṣkaro 'smyaham
Unter den Prajāpatis bin Ich Dakṣa; unter allen Rākṣasas bin Ich Nirṛti. Unter den Mächtigen bin Ich Vāyu, der Wind; und unter den Inseln (dvīpas) bin Ich Puṣkara.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) speaking in an Ishvara-Gita-like register of divine vibhutis
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It presents the Supreme as the inner sovereignty behind all orders of beings—manifesting as the foremost principle within each category—indicating a single Lord pervading diverse names and forms.
The verse supports vibhūti-anusandhāna (contemplation on divine manifestations): a meditative method where the practitioner steadies the mind by recognizing Īśvara as the excellence (śreṣṭhatva) within strength, life-breath (Vāyu), and cosmic governance.
By framing the Supreme as the one reality expressing itself through many cosmic functions and deities, it aligns with the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis where the same Īśvara is honored through both Śaiva and Vaiṣṇava vocabularies.