Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
सुधामा कर्मकरणी युगान्तदहनात्मिका / संकर्षणी जगद्धात्री कामयोनिः किरीटिनी
sudhāmā karmakaraṇī yugāntadahanātmikā / saṃkarṣaṇī jagaddhātrī kāmayoniḥ kirīṭinī
Ella es Sudhāmā, la hacedora de las obras y el poder tras la acción; ella es la esencia misma de la conflagración al fin de la era. Ella es Saṃkarṣaṇī, la fuerza que atrae y reabsorbe; la sustentadora de los mundos; la fuente del deseo; y la Soberana coronada.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching in the Ishvara Gita context
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: raudra
By describing one Divine Power as both the force behind karma and the dissolving fire of pralaya, the verse points to a single all-pervading Reality that manifests as creation, maintenance, and withdrawal—functions that ultimately rest in the Supreme.
The verse supports Ishvara-centered meditation (īśvara-dhyāna) by giving functional divine epithets—action, withdrawal (saṃkarṣaṇa), and dissolution—so the practitioner can contemplate the Lord/Śakti as the inner power governing karma and the yama-niyama oriented path of Pāśupata-style discipline.
It uses shared theological language of cosmic functions—sustaining, withdrawing, and dissolving—commonly attributed across Śaiva and Vaiṣṇava frames, reinforcing the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis where one Supreme is praised through multiple names and powers.