Īśvara-gītā: Brahman as All-Pervading—Kāla, Prakṛti–Puruṣa, Tattva-Evolution, and Mokṣa
नित्यं हि नास्ति जगति भूतं स्थावरजङ्गमम् / ऋते मामेकमव्यक्तं व्योमरूपं महेश्वरम्
nityaṃ hi nāsti jagati bhūtaṃ sthāvarajaṅgamam / ṛte māmekamavyaktaṃ vyomarūpaṃ maheśvaram
အမှန်တကယ် ဤလောက၌ မရွေ့မလျားသောအရာနှင့် ရွေ့လျားသောအရာ အားလုံးအနက် ထာဝရရှိသောအရာ မရှိပါ—ငါတစ်ပါးတည်းကို မလွဲ၍။ ငါသည် အဗျက်တ (မထင်ရှားသော)၊ ဗျိုးမပုံသဏ္ဌာန် (အာကာသသဘော) ရှိသော မဟေရှ္ဝရ ဖြစ်သည်။
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) speaking as the Supreme Īśvara in the Ishvara Gita
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
It distinguishes all created beings—moving and unmoving—as non-eternal, and identifies the Supreme as the one eternal reality: the unmanifest, all-pervading Īśvara, described as “space-like” (vyomarūpa).
The verse supports Pāśupata-style contemplation on impermanence (anityatā) and absorption in the unmanifest Lord—meditating on Īśvara as subtle, all-pervading, and beyond form, which steadies detachment and one-pointedness.
Though spoken by Lord Kūrma (Viṣṇu), the Supreme is named “Maheśvara,” reflecting the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis: one Īśvara is praised through both Śaiva and Vaiṣṇava divine titles.