Dakṣa-yajña-bhaṅgaḥ — Dadhīci’s Teaching and the Destruction of Dakṣa’s Sacrifice
तमर्चयति यो रुद्रं स्वात्मन्येकं सनातनम् / चेतसा भावयुक्तेन स याति परमं पदम्
tamarcayati yo rudraṃ svātmanyekaṃ sanātanam / cetasā bhāvayuktena sa yāti paramaṃ padam
Celui qui vénère Rudra—l’Unique Seigneur, éternel—au sein de son propre Soi, l’esprit imprégné de bhakti et de contemplation intérieure, atteint la demeure suprême.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching the sages (Kurma Purana’s Shaiva-Vaishnava synthesis)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It presents Rudra as the one eternal reality to be realized inwardly—worship is directed to the Lord seated in one’s own Self, implying liberation through inner recognition rather than external ritual alone.
The verse emphasizes antaryāga (inner worship): focused contemplation with cetas (mind/heart) and bhāva (devotional-intent), aligning with Pāśupata-oriented discipline where devotion and inward absorption lead to the supreme state.
Within the Kurma Purana’s synthetic theology, Rudra is taught as the inner, supreme Lord to be realized; this supports a non-sectarian, non-dual framing where the highest reality is approached through Śaiva devotion without contradicting Vaiṣṇava revelation.