Devadāru (Dāruvana) Forest: The Delusion of Ritual Pride, the Liṅga Crisis, and the Teaching of Jñāna–Pāśupata Yoga
नमो दिग्वाससे तुभ्यं विकृताय पिनाकिने / सर्वप्रणतदेहाय स्वयमप्रणतात्मने
namo digvāsase tubhyaṃ vikṛtāya pinākine / sarvapraṇatadehāya svayamapraṇatātmane
សូមនមស្ការដល់ព្រះអ្នកស្លៀកមេឃ (ទិគ្វាសស) ព្រះពិនាកិនដ៏អស្ចារ្យគួរឱ្យកោតខ្លាច; សូមនមស្ការដល់ព្រះដែលសត្វលោកទាំងអស់គោរពបង្គំដល់ព្រះកាយ ប៉ុន្តែព្រះអាត្មានៃព្រះមិនបង្គំដល់អ្នកណា។
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching/presenting a Rudra-stuti within the Upari-bhaga discourse (Ishvara-Gītā setting)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It portrays the Lord as “svayam apraṇatātmā”—the Self that is inherently independent and unsurpassed: worshipped by all, yet not subordinated to any higher principle.
The verse supports Pāśupata-style contemplation on Rudra as the transcendent Īśvara: meditate on Him as the sky-clad ascetic (digvāsa) and as the unbowed Self, cultivating surrender (praṇati) while recognizing His absolute sovereignty.
In the Kurma Purana’s Ishvara-Gītā atmosphere, Vishnu (as Kurma) voices praise of Rudra, reflecting a synthetic theology where devotion to Śiva is affirmed within a broader non-dual Īśvara framework rather than sectarian opposition.