Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
क्षोभिका बन्धिका भेद्या भेदाभेदविवर्जिता / अभिन्नाभिन्नसंस्थाना वंशिनी वंशहारिणी
kṣobhikā bandhikā bhedyā bhedābhedavivarjitā / abhinnābhinnasaṃsthānā vaṃśinī vaṃśahāriṇī
彼女はあらゆる顕現を揺り動かす者、限定条件によって縛る者であり、しかもその束縛を「破り開いて」断ち切らせるものでもある。彼女は差別と無差別のいずれをも超越する。彼女の相は不分にして分、また分にして不分と現れ、系譜を成し、また系譜を収めて連続を終わらせる。
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing the sages in the Ishvara Gita section
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
By saying she is beyond both ‘difference’ and ‘non-difference,’ the verse points to a reality that cannot be captured by ordinary categories: the one Self appears as many through power (śakti), yet in truth remains unbroken and non-dual.
The verse implies the yogic task of cutting bondage (bandha) by discerning the binding power of māyā/guṇas and realizing the transcendent principle beyond bheda/abheda—an inner move central to Pāśupata-oriented liberation: loosening identification with the divided appearance and abiding in the undivided reality.
In the Kurma Purana’s synthetic theology, the supreme principle spoken by Kurma can be expressed as Ishvara with inseparable Shakti—compatible with both Shaiva (Shiva-Shakti) and Vaishnava (Vishnu-Shakti) idioms—thus supporting a non-sectarian, non-dual reading.