Īśvara-gītā: Brahman as All-Pervading—Kāla, Prakṛti–Puruṣa, Tattva-Evolution, and Mokṣa
मत्सन्निधावेष कालः करोति सकलं जगत् / नियोजयत्यनन्तात्मा ह्येतद् वेदानुशासनम्
matsannidhāveṣa kālaḥ karoti sakalaṃ jagat / niyojayatyanantātmā hyetad vedānuśāsanam
నా సన్నిధిలోనే కాలము సమస్త జగత్తు కార్యాలను నిర్వహిస్తుంది. అనంతాత్ముడు దానిని నియమిస్తాడు—ఇదే వేదోపదేశం।
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) instructing the sages/Indradyumna in Purāṇic dialogue style
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the Supreme as the Anantātman (Infinite Self) who appoints and regulates Time itself, implying that cosmic change operates under Ishvara’s conscious governance rather than independently.
The verse supports an Ishvara-centered contemplative stance: meditation on the Lord as the inner governor (antaryāmin) behind Kāla and cosmic processes—an outlook aligned with disciplined Yoga and devotion-based concentration taught across the Kurma Purana’s spiritual sections.
By grounding cosmic order in the one Infinite Lord who commands Kāla according to Vedic authority, the verse reinforces the Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis: ultimate sovereignty belongs to the single Supreme reality honored through both Shaiva and Vaishnava theological idioms.