Kapālamocana: The Cutting of Brahmā’s Fifth Head, Śiva’s Kāpālika Vow, and Purification in Vārāṇasī
योगादायै नमस्तुभ्यं योगिनां गुरवे नमः / नमः संसारनाशाय संसारोत्पत्तये नमः
yogādāyai namastubhyaṃ yogināṃ gurave namaḥ / namaḥ saṃsāranāśāya saṃsārotpattaye namaḥ
ヨーガを根源より授け給う御方に礼拝し、ヨーギーたちのグルに礼拝する。輪廻(サンサーラ)の束縛を滅する御方に礼拝し、また世界の生起の源なる御方に礼拝する。
A devotee/sage offering a stuti (hymn of praise) to the Supreme Lord (Ishvara) as taught in the Kurma Purana’s Upari-bhaga discourse
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
It praises the Supreme as both the originator and dissolver of saṃsāra, indicating a transcendent Ishvara who governs manifestation and liberation—implying the highest reality stands beyond the cycle yet also projects it.
The verse emphasizes Yoga as divinely bestowed and guided: the Lord is called the “guru of yogins,” pointing to Ishvara-centered discipline (īśvara-bhakti, inner restraint, and contemplative absorption) as the means to end saṃsāra.
By addressing the Supreme as the single source of Yoga, creation, and dissolution, it supports the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis where the highest Ishvara can be praised in Shaiva or Vaishnava language without contradiction.