Prākṛta-pralaya, Pratisarga Doctrine, and the Ishvara-Samanvaya of Yoga and Devotion
तमाविश्य महादेवो भगवान्नीललोहितः / करोति लोकसंहारं भीषणं रूपमाश्रितः
tamāviśya mahādevo bhagavānnīlalohitaḥ / karoti lokasaṃhāraṃ bhīṣaṇaṃ rūpamāśritaḥ
ആ (പ്രളയതത്ത്വത്തിൽ) പ്രവേശിച്ച് ഭഗവാൻ നീലലോഹിത മഹാദേവൻ ഭീഷണരൂപം ആശ്രയിച്ച് ലോകസംഹാരം നടത്തുന്നു।
Narrator (Purāṇic narrator describing Rudra’s role in saṃhāra)
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
It presents saṃhāra as a deliberate, divine function: the Lord assumes a form to withdraw the cosmos, implying a transcendent controller beyond changing forms—Atman/Iśvara remains while manifestations arise and dissolve.
While not prescribing a technique, the verse supports a Yogic contemplation central to Purāṇic Yoga: meditating on Iśvara as the power behind dissolution (saṃhāra) cultivates vairāgya (dispassion) and steadiness, aligning with Pāśupata-style focus on Rudra as the supreme governor of cosmic processes.
By emphasizing Rudra’s cosmic function within the Purāṇic order, it harmonizes with the Kurma Purana’s synthetic theology: the one supreme reality operates through distinct divine names and forms (here, Śiva as Nīlalohita) to accomplish universal governance.