Yuga-Dharma: The Four Ages, Decline of Dharma, and the Rise of Social Order
रसोल्लासा कालयोगात् त्रेताख्ये नश्यते ततः / तस्यां सिद्धौ प्रणष्टायामन्या सिद्धिरवर्तत
rasollāsā kālayogāt tretākhye naśyate tataḥ / tasyāṃ siddhau praṇaṣṭāyāmanyā siddhiravartata
ເນື່ອງຈາກການປະສານຂອງອິດທິພົນແຫ່ງກາລະ «ຣະໂສລລາສາ» ອັນເປັນສິດທິຢ່າງໜຶ່ງ ຈຶ່ງສູນໄປໃນຍຸກເທຣຕາ. ເມື່ອສິດທິນັ້ນຫາຍໄປ ສິດທິອື່ນກໍເກີດຂຶ້ນຄອບຄອງແທນ.
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) instructing the sages/Indradyumna on yuga-dharma and time-driven changes in spiritual attainments
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It implies that siddhis are time-conditioned phenomena—arising and vanishing under Kāla—whereas realization of the Self is not a yuga-bound power but the stable goal beyond such changing attainments.
The verse points to the Kurma Purana’s yogic framework where siddhis may appear as by-products of sādhana, yet they are not permanent; discipline (yama-niyama), devotion to Īśvara, and steadiness in practice are emphasized over chasing time-dependent powers.
By framing siddhi and dharma under the governance of Kāla and Īśvara, the text supports the Purana’s non-sectarian stance: the supreme lordship guiding yoga and dharma is presented in a unified way consistent with Shaiva-Vaishnava synthesis.