Invocation, Purāṇa Lakṣaṇas, Kurma at the Samudra-manthana, and Indradyumna’s Liberation Teaching
Iśvara-Gītā Prelude
माहेश्वरं तथा साम्बं सौरं सर्वार्थसंचयम् / पराशरोक्तमपरं मारीचं भार्गवाह्वयम्
māheśvaraṃ tathā sāmbaṃ sauraṃ sarvārthasaṃcayam / parāśaroktamaparaṃ mārīcaṃ bhārgavāhvayam
तसेच ‘माहेश्वर’, ‘साम्ब’, ‘सौर’ आणि ‘सर्वार्थसंचय’ (सर्व अर्थांचा संग्रह); पुढे पराशरांनी कथिलेला दुसरा ग्रंथ, ‘मारीच’ आणि ‘भार्गव’ नावाचा (परंपरा)ही आहे.
Sūta (traditional Purāṇic narrator) describing recognized textual/traditional lineages at the opening of the Kurma Purana
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Indirectly: by cataloguing Māheśvara, Saura, and other lineages, the verse signals the Purāṇic method of approaching one supreme reality through multiple authorized traditions, a hallmark of the Kurma Purana’s integrative (Śaiva–Vaiṣṇava) theology.
No specific practice is taught in this verse; it sets the scriptural map by naming traditions (notably Māheśvara) that later ground teachings such as Pāśupata-oriented discipline and the Kurma Purana’s yoga-inflected instruction (especially in the Upari-bhāga’s Īśvara-gītā section).
By placing Māheśvara (Śiva-centered) and Saura (Sūrya-centered) traditions alongside other authoritative streams within a single Purāṇic framework, it reflects the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis where diverse deity-focused teachings are treated as compatible routes within dharma.