Īśvara-gītā: Bhakti as the Supreme Means; the Three Śaktis; Non-compelled Lordship
अन्ये ऽपि ये विकर्मस्थाः शूद्राद्या नीचजातयः / भक्तिमन्तः प्रमुच्यन्ते कालेन मयि संगताः
anye 'pi ye vikarmasthāḥ śūdrādyā nīcajātayaḥ / bhaktimantaḥ pramucyante kālena mayi saṃgatāḥ
Même ceux qui demeurent dans une conduite fautive — śūdras et autres de naissance humble —, s’ils sont animés de dévotion, sont avec le temps délivrés, étant entrés en communion avec Moi.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching Indradyumna (Ishvara Gita context)
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It presents the Supreme (Ishvara) as the liberating refuge: liberation arises through communion with Him, and devotion becomes the direct bridge to that saving union, regardless of social origin.
The verse foregrounds bhakti-yoga—steadfast devotion and inner turning toward Ishvara—implying that sustained God-orientation over time (kālena) matures into saṃgati (union/communion) and culminates in moksha.
By emphasizing Ishvara as the universal liberator accessible through devotion, it aligns with the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis where the Supreme Lord (whether named Shiva or Vishnu) is one reality granting liberation to all sincere devotees.