Īśvara-gītā: Bhakti as the Supreme Means; the Three Śaktis; Non-compelled Lordship
ध्यानेन मां प्रपश्यन्ति केचिज्ज्ञानेन चापरे / अपरे भक्तियोगेन कर्मयोगेन चापरे
dhyānena māṃ prapaśyanti kecijjñānena cāpare / apare bhaktiyogena karmayogena cāpare
काही जण ध्यानाने मला पाहतात, काही विवेकज्ञानाने. इतर भक्तियोगाने, आणि इतर कर्मयोगाने मला प्राप्त करतात.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching seekers the recognized yogic approaches to realizing Ishvara
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the Supreme Lord as directly realizable—“seen” or known—not merely believed in, and accessible through multiple valid disciplines (dhyāna, jñāna, bhakti, karma), implying a single Reality approached by differing temperaments.
The verse explicitly names dhyāna-yoga (contemplative absorption), jñāna (discriminative insight into Reality), bhakti-yoga (devotional surrender and worship), and karma-yoga (selfless performance of duty as an offering), aligning with Purāṇic yoga-shāstra frameworks.
Though Vishnu (as Kurma) speaks, the teaching is ecumenical: realization of the one Ishvara is possible through diverse yogas, a hallmark of the Kurma Purana’s synthetic approach often harmonizing sectarian paths (including Shaiva-Pashupata and Vaishnava devotion) under one Supreme Reality.