Īśvara-Gītā (continued): Twofold Yoga, Aṣṭāṅga Discipline, Pāśupata Meditation, and the Unity of Nārāyaṇa–Maheśvara
चिन्तयेत् तत्र विमलं परं ज्योतिर्यदक्षरम् / तस्मिन् ज्योतिषि विन्यस्यस्वात्मानं तदभेदतः
cintayet tatra vimalaṃ paraṃ jyotiryadakṣaram / tasmin jyotiṣi vinyasyasvātmānaṃ tadabhedataḥ
ณ ที่นั้นพึงเพ่งภาวนาแสงสว่างอันบริสุทธิ์สูงสุดซึ่งไม่เสื่อมสลาย แล้ววางอาตมันของตนลงในแสงนั้น และดำรงอยู่โดยไม่เห็นความแตกต่างจากแสงนั้น
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing King Indradyumna within the Ishvara Gita teaching sequence
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the Supreme as the imperishable, stainless Light (akṣara-jyotis) and instructs the meditator to realize the Atman by establishing oneself in identity (abheda) with that Supreme radiance.
It teaches dhyāna focused on the akṣara-jyotis (imperishable Light) and a contemplative absorption where the practitioner ‘places’ the self in that reality—an Advaitic culmination consistent with the Kurma Purana’s Pāśupata-oriented discipline of inner purification and one-pointed meditation.
By defining the goal as the imperishable Supreme Light beyond sectarian form, it supports the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis: the highest Ishvara is realized as one non-dual reality, approachable through shared yogic contemplation.