Devadāru (Dāruvana) Forest: The Delusion of Ritual Pride, the Liṅga Crisis, and the Teaching of Jñāna–Pāśupata Yoga
एको देवः सर्वभूतेषु गूढो मायी रुद्रः सकलो निष्कलश्च / स एव देवी न च तद्विभिन्न- मेतज्ज्ञात्वा ह्यमृतत्वं व्रजन्ति
eko devaḥ sarvabhūteṣu gūḍho māyī rudraḥ sakalo niṣkalaśca / sa eva devī na ca tadvibhinna- metajjñātvā hyamṛtatvaṃ vrajanti
Un solo Dios—oculto en todos los seres—es Rudra, señor de la māyā, a la vez con atributos y más allá de todo atributo. Él mismo es la Diosa (Śakti) y no es distinto de Ella. Conociendo esta verdad, en verdad los seres alcanzan la inmortalidad.
Lord Kūrma (as instructor in the Ishvara-gītā tradition)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the Supreme as the one indwelling Lord hidden in all beings—simultaneously manifest (sakala) and transcendent (niṣkala). Realizing this non-dual indweller is equated with attaining amṛtatva (liberation).
The verse points to jñāna-yoga within a Pāśupata framework: inward contemplation of the indwelling Rudra as the one reality in all beings, culminating in direct knowledge (jñāna) that dissolves duality and grants immortality.
Within the Kurma Purana’s synthesis, the teaching voiced by Lord Kūrma affirms a non-dual Ishvara: Rudra as the supreme indweller, inseparable from Devī (Śakti). This supports the Purāṇic stance that sectarian names differ while the Supreme reality is one.