Tīrtha-Māhātmya: Mahālaya, Kedāra, Rivers and Fords, and Devadāru Forest
Akṣaya-Karma Doctrine
इहाश्रमवरे रम्ये निवसिष्यथ सर्वदा / मद्भावनासमायुक्तास्ततः सिद्धिमवाप्स्यथ
ihāśramavare ramye nivasiṣyatha sarvadā / madbhāvanāsamāyuktāstataḥ siddhimavāpsyatha
この麗しく最勝のアーシュラマに、汝らは常に住まうであろう。わたしへの観想と相応するなら、そののちシッディ(成就)を得る。
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing the recipients (sages/devotees/Indradyumna’s party) to remain in the āśrama with God-contemplation
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the Supreme as a realizable Lord who is approached through sustained “mad-bhāvanā” (God-remembrance/inner contemplation), implying that perfection arises from inward alignment with the divine reality rather than from mere external ritual.
The verse emphasizes dhyāna-like practice—continuous contemplation of the Lord (mad-bhāvanā)—supported by disciplined residence in a sacred āśrama setting, aligning with Kurma Purana’s yoga-ethic where environment, conduct, and steady remembrance mature into siddhi.
While Vishnu (as Kurma) speaks in first person, the teaching mirrors the Purana’s synthesis: siddhi is gained through single-pointed devotion to the Supreme Lord, a principle shared across Shaiva-Pashupata and Vaishnava contemplative frameworks within the Kurma Purana.