Īśvara-gītā: The Supreme Lord as Brahman, the Source of Creation, and the Inner Self
एवं हि यो वेद गुहाशयं परं प्रभुं पुराणं पुरुषं विश्वरूपम् / हिरण्मयं बुद्धिमतां परां गतिं स बुद्धिमान् बुद्धिमतीत्य तिष्ठति
evaṃ hi yo veda guhāśayaṃ paraṃ prabhuṃ purāṇaṃ puruṣaṃ viśvarūpam / hiraṇmayaṃ buddhimatāṃ parāṃ gatiṃ sa buddhimān buddhimatītya tiṣṭhati
ດັ່ງນັ້ນ ຜູ້ໃດຮູ້ຢ່າງແທ້ຈິງພຣະເຈົ້າສູງສຸດ ຜູ້ສະຖິດຢູ່ໃນຖ້ຳລັບແຫ່ງຫົວໃຈ—ປຸຣຸສະຜູ້ເກົ່າແກ່ ຜູ້ເປັນຈອມອຳນາດ ມີຮູບແບບເປັນສາກົນ—ສະຫວ່າງດັ່ງຄຳ ແລະເປັນຈຸດໝາຍສູງສຸດຂອງຜູ້ມີປັນຍາ—ຜູ້ນັ້ນຍ່ອມເປັນຜູ້ມີປັນຍາແທ້ ແລະເມື່ອບັນລຸຄວາມເຂົ້າໃຈສົມບູນ ກໍຕັ້ງມັ່ນຢູ່ໃນການຮູ້ນັ້ນ.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching in the Ishvara Gita discourse
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the Supreme as the inner Indweller (guhāśaya) who is also the cosmic Person (puruṣa, viśvarūpa): transcendent yet present within the heart, known by direct realization rather than mere intellect.
The verse points to inward contemplation on the Lord in the “heart-cave,” aligning with meditative absorption (dhyāna/samādhi) central to the Kurma Purana’s Pashupata-oriented discipline: turning awareness inward to realize the luminous, all-pervading Ishvara.
By teaching one supreme, all-pervading Lord as the inner Self and universal form, the Ishvara Gita supports a non-sectarian synthesis: the same ultimate Ishvara is praised across Shaiva and Vaishnava idioms as the single highest reality.