Sūrya-vaṃśa Genealogy and the Supremacy of Tapas: Gāyatrī-Japa, Rudra-Darśana, and Śatarudrīya Upadeśa
नमो धात्रे विधात्रे च नमो वेदात्ममूर्तये / सांख्ययोगाधिगम्याय नमस्ते ज्ञानमूर्तये
namo dhātre vidhātre ca namo vedātmamūrtaye / sāṃkhyayogādhigamyāya namaste jñānamūrtaye
ధాత్రుడికీ విధాత్రుడికీ నమస్కారం; వేదాత్మమూర్తికి నమస్కారం. సాంఖ్యయోగములచే గ్రాహ్యుడవైన, జ్ఞానమూర్తి ప్రభూ—నీకు ప్రణామం।
A devotee/sage offering a stuti (hymn) to the Supreme Lord (Hari as the all-knowing Ishvara), in the Purva-bhaga’s devotional-philosophical frame
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It presents the Supreme as jñānamūrti—knowledge itself—who also appears as the sustaining and ordering power behind creation, implying an ultimate consciousness that is both immanent (as Veda/knowledge) and transcendent (as the cosmic ordainer).
The verse points to two classical means of realization: Sāṅkhya (viveka—discriminative insight into puruṣa/prakṛti) and Yoga (inner discipline leading to direct apprehension of Ishvara), aligning with the Purana’s integrated jñāna–yoga devotion.
By praising the one Supreme as the Veda-bodied, knowledge-bodied Lord accessible through Sāṅkhya-Yoga, it supports the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis where ultimate Ishvara can be approached in Shaiva or Vaishnava idioms without contradiction.