Daily Duties of Brāhmaṇas: Snāna, Sandhyā, Sūrya-hṛdaya, Japa, Tarpaṇa, and the Pañca-mahāyajñas
तस्मात् सर्वप्रयत्नेन संध्योपासनमाचरेत् / उपासितो भवेत् तेन देवो योगतनुः परः
tasmāt sarvaprayatnena saṃdhyopāsanamācaret / upāsito bhavet tena devo yogatanuḥ paraḥ
Ainsi, avec tous les efforts possibles, on doit accomplir l’adoration de Sandhyā (les rites du crépuscule). Par cette pratique, le Deva Suprême—dont la forme même est le Yoga—est véritablement adoré.
Lord Kūrma (Viṣṇu) instructing the sages/seekers in a Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis framework
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
It presents the Supreme Lord as “yoga-tanuḥ”—the transcendent reality approached through disciplined Yoga; worship is not merely external but realized through yogic practice aligned with daily sacred duty (nitya-karma).
Sandhyā-upāsanā is emphasized as a foundational daily discipline—regular twilight prayer with mantra, mental recollection, and inner steadiness—treated as a yogic act that directly constitutes worship of the Supreme.
By defining the Supreme Deity as “yoga embodied,” the verse supports the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis: the one Supreme (Iśvara) is worshipped through yogic discipline, a teaching compatible with both Shaiva (Pāśupata-oriented) and Vaishnava devotion.