Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
संसारपारा दुर्वारा दुर्निरोक्ष्या दुरासदा / प्राणशक्तिः प्रणविद्या योगिनी परमा कला
saṃsārapārā durvārā durnirokṣyā durāsadā / prāṇaśaktiḥ praṇavidyā yoginī paramā kalā
นางคือฝั่งไกลพ้นสังสารวัฏ—ข้ามได้ยาก เข้าถึงมิได้ ยากแก่การเห็น และมิอาจเข้าใกล้โดยง่าย นางคือพลังปราณ วิทยาแห่งปรณวะ (โอม) คือโยคินี และเป็นกะลาอันสูงสุด
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching in the Ishvara Gita
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
By describing the supreme principle as beyond saṃsāra and yet present as prāṇa-śakti and praṇava-vidyā, the verse points to the transcendent-immanent reality: hard to grasp as an object, but realized inwardly through its life-power and the mantra Oṃ.
The verse emphasizes praṇava-vidyā—contemplation and disciplined meditation on Oṃ—together with mastery of prāṇa (vital force). This aligns with Ishvara Gita-style yoga where mantra, prāṇa-regulation, and inward realization culminate in approach to the supreme Shakti.
By presenting the supreme as Yoginī-Śakti and as the inner power realized through Oṃ and yoga, the verse supports the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis: the one Supreme (Ishvara) is taught by Vishnu (Kurma) in terms equally resonant with Shaiva-Shakti and Vaishnava contemplative theology.