Invocation, Purāṇa Lakṣaṇas, Kurma at the Samudra-manthana, and Indradyumna’s Liberation Teaching
Iśvara-Gītā Prelude
निर्गुणाय नमस्तुभ्यं निष्कलायामलात्मने / पुरुषाय नमस्तुभ्यं विश्वरूपाय ते नमः
nirguṇāya namastubhyaṃ niṣkalāyāmalātmane / puruṣāya namastubhyaṃ viśvarūpāya te namaḥ
ဂုဏ်သတ္တိကင်းသော (နိရ္ဂုဏ) ဘုရားသခင်ထံ နမസ്കာရပါ၏၊ အစိတ်အပိုင်းမရှိသော၊ အညစ်အကြေးကင်းသန့်သော အတ္တမတော်ထံ။ အမြင့်ဆုံး ပုရုಷ (ပုရုရှ) ထံ နမസ്കာရပါ၏။ စကြဝဠာရုပ် (ဝိශ්ဝရူပ) ဖြစ်သော သင့်ထံ နမস্কာရပါ၏။
A narrator/traditional invocatory voice (mangalācaraṇa) praising the Supreme Lord identified with Hari/Iśvara in the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the Supreme as nirguṇa (beyond qualities) and niṣkala (partless), yet as amala-ātman (the perfectly pure Self), indicating a transcendental Consciousness that is untouched by material attributes.
The verse supports contemplative Yoga that alternates between nirguṇa-dhyāna (meditation on the attributeless, partless Self) and viśvarūpa-bhāvanā (seeing the cosmos as the Lord’s form), aligning devotion with non-dual insight.
By praising one Supreme Iśvara as both transcendent (nirguṇa, niṣkala) and immanent (viśvarūpa), it reflects the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian stance where Hari and Śiva are understood as expressions of the same ultimate Reality.