Brahmā’s Lotus-Birth, the Sealing of the Cosmic Womb, and the Epiphany of Parameśvara
Hari–Hara Samanvaya
तृष्टो ऽस्मि सर्वथाहन्ते भक्त्या तव जगन्मय / वरं वृणीष्वं नह्यावां विभिन्नौ परमार्थतः
tṛṣṭo 'smi sarvathāhante bhaktyā tava jaganmaya / varaṃ vṛṇīṣvaṃ nahyāvāṃ vibhinnau paramārthataḥ
Je suis entièrement satisfait de toi par ta dévotion, ô toi qui es pénétré de l’univers. Choisis une grâce; car, dans la vérité suprême, nous deux ne sommes pas séparés.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu as the Kurma incarnation) speaking to the devotee (Indradyumna in the Kurma Purana’s dialogue frame)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It states that, in paramārtha (ultimate reality), the devotee and the Lord are not truly separate—pointing to the Atman’s non-difference from Ishvara when ignorance is removed.
The verse highlights bhakti as a direct means of purification and realization; in the Ishvara Gita context, devotion functions as a yogic discipline that culminates in knowledge of non-separation (abheda-bodha).
By emphasizing ultimate non-difference between the individual and the Lord, it supports the Kurma Purana’s broader non-dual framework in which sectarian distinctions (including Shiva–Vishnu difference) are secondary to the one supreme reality.