Invocation, Purāṇa Lakṣaṇas, Kurma at the Samudra-manthana, and Indradyumna’s Liberation Teaching
Iśvara-Gītā Prelude
त्वया सूत महाबुद्धे भगवान् ब्रह्मवित्तमः / इतिहासपुराणार्थं व्यासः सम्यगुपासितः
tvayā sūta mahābuddhe bhagavān brahmavittamaḥ / itihāsapurāṇārthaṃ vyāsaḥ samyagupāsitaḥ
O Sūta, O great-minded one, the blessed Vyāsa—foremost among the knowers of Brahman—has been duly served and studied by you, for the sake of understanding the true purport of the Itihāsas and the Purāṇas.
Sages (addressing Sūta at the opening narration)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
By calling Vyāsa “brahmavittamaḥ,” it centers the Purāṇa’s authority in Brahma-vidyā—knowledge of Brahman/Ātman—implying that the Itihāsa–Purāṇa tradition is meant to convey liberating insight, not merely history.
The verse emphasizes upāsanā—reverent attendance, disciplined study, and service to a realized teacher (Vyāsa). In the Kurma Purāṇa’s spiritual frame, such guru-upāsanā is a foundational sādhana that supports later Yoga teachings (including Pāśupata-oriented discipline and contemplative inquiry).
Indirectly: it grounds the teaching in Vyāsa’s Brahman-realization, a non-sectarian source that later supports the Kurma Purāṇa’s synthesis—presenting Śiva and Viṣṇu-oriented paths as converging in the same Brahman-centered Purāṇic wisdom.