Prākṛta-pralaya, Pratisarga Doctrine, and the Ishvara-Samanvaya of Yoga and Devotion
गमनं चैव कृष्णस्य पार्थस्यापि च दर्शनम् / कृष्णद्वैपायनस्योक्ता युगधर्माः सनातनाः
gamanaṃ caiva kṛṣṇasya pārthasyāpi ca darśanam / kṛṣṇadvaipāyanasyoktā yugadharmāḥ sanātanāḥ
ດັ່ງນັ້ນໄດ້ພັນລະນາການເດີນຈາກໄປຂອງກຣິດສະນະ ແລະການໄດ້ເຫັນພາຣຖະ (ອາຣຈຸນ) ອີກຄັ້ງ; ພ້ອມທັງທຳມະແຫ່ງຍຸກທັງຫຼາຍອັນອະມະຕະ ທີ່ກຣິດສະນະ-ດວຍປາຍະນະ (ວຽສະ) ໄດ້ສອນໄວ້.
Sūta (narrator) summarizing the teaching-tradition of Vyāsa within the Kurma Purana discourse
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
By stressing “sanātana” yuga-dharma taught through Vyāsa, the verse implies a perennial spiritual law grounded in the timeless Self, even as outer events (Kṛṣṇa’s departure, Arjuna’s vision) change.
The verse points to yuga-dharma rather than a single technique: in the Kurma Purana’s framework this includes age-appropriate sādhana—devotion, discipline, and Shaiva-Vaishnava aligned worship—supporting inner steadiness amid historical transition.
It presents dharma as a single eternal teaching-stream transmitted by Vyāsa and illustrated through Vaiṣṇava figures (Kṛṣṇa, Arjuna), consistent with the Kurma Purana’s synthesis where sectarian forms serve one sanātana truth.