Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
देव्युवाच मां विद्ध परमां शक्तिं परमेश्वरसमाश्रयाम् / अनन्यामव्ययामेकां यां पश्यन्ति मुमुक्षवः
devyuvāca māṃ viddha paramāṃ śaktiṃ parameśvarasamāśrayām / ananyāmavyayāmekāṃ yāṃ paśyanti mumukṣavaḥ
ទេវីមានព្រះវាចា៖ «ចូរដឹងថា ខ្ញុំគឺជាព្រះសក្តិដ៏អធិរាជ ស្ថិតនៅក្នុង និងអាស្រ័យលើព្រះអធិរាជ (បរមេស្វរ)។ ខ្ញុំជាអង្គតែមួយ មិនរលាយ មិនពីរ—សក្តិដែលអ្នកប្រាថ្នាមុក្ខសា បានឃើញ»។
Devi (the Goddess / Shakti)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It frames ultimate reality as a non-dual, imperishable principle: the Goddess as Supreme Shakti, realized by mumukṣus through direct insight—pointing to liberation as experiential knowledge rather than mere belief.
The verse emphasizes yogic “seeing” (paśyanti): contemplative realization of the one imperishable Shakti grounded in Parameśvara—consistent with Ishvara Gita themes of inner discernment, absorption, and devotion-led knowledge in Pāśupata-oriented practice.
By presenting Shakti as resting in Parameśvara while remaining non-dual and one, it supports the Kurma Purana’s synthesis: the supreme Lord (read across Shaiva-Vaishnava idioms) and divine power are inseparable in essence, guiding seekers beyond sectarian difference.