Varnāśrama-Krama, Vairāgya as the Ground of Saṃnyāsa, and Brahmārpaṇa Karma-yoga
ब्रह्मण्याधाय क्रमाणि निःसङ्गः कामवर्जितः / प्रसन्नेनैव मनसा कुर्वाणो याति तत्पदम्
brahmaṇyādhāya kramāṇi niḥsaṅgaḥ kāmavarjitaḥ / prasannenaiva manasā kurvāṇo yāti tatpadam
一切の行為をブラフマンに安置し、執着なく欲を離れ、澄みわたる心で行ずる者は、かの最上の境地(最高の住処)に至る。
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing King Indradyumna (didactic discourse on Yoga and dharma)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the Supreme as Brahman—the final “state/abode” reached not by abandoning action, but by dedicating action to the Supreme and dissolving attachment and desire, implying liberation through inner non-clinging.
It emphasizes Karma-Yoga: performing one’s duties in an ordered way (kramāṇi) while offering them to Brahman, cultivating niḥsaṅgatā (non-attachment), kāma-tyāga (freedom from desire), and prasanna-manas (mental serenity).
By centering liberation on dedication to the Supreme (Brahman/Ishvara) rather than sectarian identity, it reflects the Kurma Purana’s synthesis where Shaiva-Vaishnava paths converge in disciplined Yoga, offering, and detachment.