Virocana–Bali, Aditi’s Tapas, and the Vāmana–Trivikrama Episode
गत्वा महान्तं प्रकृतिं प्रधानं ब्रह्माणमेकं पुरुषं स्वबीजम् / अतिष्ठदीशस्य पदं तदव्ययं दृष्ट्वा देवास्तत्र तत्र स्तुवन्ति
gatvā mahāntaṃ prakṛtiṃ pradhānaṃ brahmāṇamekaṃ puruṣaṃ svabījam / atiṣṭhadīśasya padaṃ tadavyayaṃ dṛṣṭvā devāstatra tatra stuvanti
ເມື່ອໄດ້ກ້າວພົ້ນມະຫັດ, ປະກຣິຕິ ແລະ ປະທານ, ແລະຮູ້ແຈ້ງພຣະພຣົມັນອົງດຽວ—ປຸຣຸສະອົງດຽວຜູ້ເກີດຈາກຕົນເອງ (ມີເມັດພັນໃນຕົນ)—ພຣະອົງກໍສະຖິດຢູ່ໃນສະຖານະອັນບໍ່ເສື່ອມຂອງອີສະວະຣະ. ເຫັນສະພາບສູງສຸດນັ້ນ ບັນດາເທວະດາທັງຫຼາຍ ທັງທີ່ນັ້ນແລະທົ່ວໄປ ພາກັນຂັບຮ້ອງສັນລະເສີນ.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) narrating an Ishvara-centered yogic realization in the Kurma Purana’s Purva-bhaga context
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the Supreme as one Brahman/Puruṣa, self-caused and beyond Prakṛti and its evolutes (like Mahat), indicating an imperishable, non-material ground of consciousness identified with Īśvara’s highest station.
The verse implies a discriminative, contemplative ascent (viveka) beyond tattvas—Mahat, Prakṛti, Pradhāna—culminating in firm establishment (niṣṭhā) in Īśvara’s imperishable state, aligning with Kurma Purana’s Ishvara-oriented yogic realization.
By centering realization on Īśvara as the one imperishable Brahman/Puruṣa beyond Prakṛti, it supports the Kurma Purana’s integrative stance: the Supreme Lord praised by the devas transcends sectarian labels, enabling Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis in devotion and metaphysics.