Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
विश्वरूपा महागर्भा विश्वेशेच्छानुवर्तिनी / महीयसी ब्रह्मयोनिर्महालक्ष्मीसमुद्भावा
viśvarūpā mahāgarbhā viśveśecchānuvartinī / mahīyasī brahmayonirmahālakṣmīsamudbhāvā
သူမသည် စကြဝဠာတစ်လုံးလုံး၏ ရုပ်သဏ္ဌာန်ဖြစ်၍ သတ္တဝါအားလုံး၏ မဟာဂರ್ಭ ဖြစ်သည်။ စကြဝဠာ၏ အရှင်၏ အလိုတော်အတိုင်း လှုပ်ရှားတော်မူသည်။ အမြင့်မြတ်ဆုံးဖြစ်၍ ဘြဟ္မာ ပေါ်ထွန်းရာ မူလအရင်းအမြစ်၊ မဟာလက္ခမီ အဖြစ် ထွန်းလင်းပေါ်လာသည်။
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching within the Ishvara-Gita context
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It presents the Supreme as operating through Shakti: the cosmic power that becomes the universe, sustains it as the womb of beings, and manifests creation (including Brahmā) in harmony with the Lord’s will—implying non-dual governance where consciousness and power are inseparable.
The verse points to īśvara-anusandhāna (God-centered contemplation): aligning one’s mind and action with the divine will (viśveśecchānuvartinī). In the Ishvara-Gita frame, this supports disciplined devotion and inward surrender—key orientations for Pāśupata-leaning practice.
By using the title Viśveśa (often Shaiva in tone) while attributing the teaching to Lord Kūrma (Vishnu), it reflects the Kurma Purana’s synthesis: one supreme Lord whose will is expressed through Shakti (Mahālakṣmī), bridging Shaiva-Vaishnava language without contradiction.