Īśvara-gītā: The Supreme Lord as Brahman, the Source of Creation, and the Inner Self
याश्च योनिषु सर्वासु संभवन्ति हि मूर्तयः / तासां माया परा योनिर्मामेव पितरं विदुः
yāśca yoniṣu sarvāsu saṃbhavanti hi mūrtayaḥ / tāsāṃ māyā parā yonirmāmeva pitaraṃ viduḥ
ယောနိအမျိုးမျိုး အားလုံး၌ ပေါ်ဖွားလာသော ကိုယ်ထည်ပုံသဏ္ဌာန်များ မည်သို့ပင်ရှိစေ—ထိုသူတို့အတွက် ငါ၏ အမြင့်မြတ်ဆုံး မာယာ(Māyā) သည် အထက်မြတ် မိခင်မATRIX ဖြစ်၏။ ထို့ပြင် သူတို့သည် ငါတစ်ပါးတည်းကိုသာ ဖခင်ဟု သိကြ၏။
Lord Kurma (Vishnu/Ishvara) speaking within the Ishvara Gita discourse
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the Supreme Lord as the ultimate progenitor behind all embodied beings, with Māyā functioning as His manifesting power; the Self is thus rooted in Ishvara rather than in mere material causation.
The verse supports Ishvara-centered contemplation: seeing all births as arising through Māyā and tracing causality back to the one Lord—an orientation foundational to the Ishvara Gita’s devotional-yogic discipline and Pashupata-style God-realization.
By emphasizing one supreme Ishvara as the source beyond all births (with Māyā as His power), it aligns with the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis where the highest reality is one, expressed through Shaiva and Vaishnava idioms.