यश्चाहं स स्वयं ब्रह्मा यो ब्रह्मा स हुताशनः । या देवी स स्वयं विष्णुर्यो विष्णुः स च चन्द्रमाः
yaścāhaṃ sa svayaṃ brahmā yo brahmā sa hutāśanaḥ | yā devī sa svayaṃ viṣṇuryo viṣṇuḥ sa ca candramāḥ
Celui qui est « Je » est véritablement Brahmā lui-même; et ce Brahmā est aussi Agni, le Feu. La Déesse est en vérité Viṣṇu; et ce même Viṣṇu est aussi la Lune. Ainsi, à Prabhāsa, les formes divines se dévoilent comme une unique Réalité, apparaissant par de multiples puissances.
Śiva (deduced from Advaita teaching to Devī in this section)
Tirtha: Prabhāsa
Type: kshetra
Listener: Devī (Pārvatī)
Scene: A visionary tableau: Brahmā, Agni, Viṣṇu, Candra, and Devī appear as overlapping translucent forms, all resolving into a single radiant core; Prabhāsa’s coastal horizon and Somnātha silhouette anchor the revelation.
The verse teaches non-duality: multiple deities and cosmic powers are expressions of one supreme Reality.
Prabhāsa Kṣetra (Prabhāsakṣetra), celebrated in the Prabhāsa Khaṇḍa as a place revealing divine unity.
No direct ritual is prescribed in this verse; it establishes the theology of seeing deity-forms as one.