Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
सर्ववित् सर्वतोभद्रा गुह्यातीता गुहारणिः / प्रक्रिया योगमाता च गङ्गा विश्वेश्वरेश्वरी
sarvavit sarvatobhadrā guhyātītā guhāraṇiḥ / prakriyā yogamātā ca gaṅgā viśveśvareśvarī
彼女は一切を知る者、あらゆる面で吉祥なる者。あらゆる秘義と秘教を超え、内なる洞窟の神秘に火を点ずる火鑽木(ぐはーらに)である。彼女は成就へ導く聖なる次第(プラクリヤー)、ヨーガの母。彼女はガンガーそのものであり、宇宙主の主母ヴィシュヴェーシュヴァレーシュヴァリーである。
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching in the Ishvara Gita context
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
By presenting the Supreme as all-knowing and as the inner “arani” that ignites realization in the cave of the heart, the verse points to inner awakening (Atman-realization) as empowered by the Supreme Shakti, beyond merely secret doctrines.
The verse emphasizes prakriyā—an ordered sadhana-method—calling the Goddess the “Mother of Yoga,” implying disciplined yogic procedure (inner purification, concentration, and awakening of insight) rather than reliance on hidden or purely esoteric claims.
By invoking Viśveśvara (a Shaiva title) together with the Ishvara Gita teaching voice of Lord Kurma (a Vaishnava form), it frames a non-sectarian synthesis: the one Supreme Lord and His Shakti are honored through both Shaiva and Vaishnava idioms.