Yati-Āśrama: Bhikṣā-vidhi, Īśvara-dhyāna, and Prāyaścitta
Mahādeva as Non-dual Brahman
अकस्मादेव हिंसां तु यदि भिक्षुः समाचरेत् / कुर्यात्कृछ्रातिकृच्छ्रं तु चान्द्रायणमथापि वा
akasmādeva hiṃsāṃ tu yadi bhikṣuḥ samācaret / kuryātkṛchrātikṛcchraṃ tu cāndrāyaṇamathāpi vā
หากภิกษุกระทำการเบียดเบียนโดยไม่ตั้งใจ พึงประกอบตบะอันหนักชื่อ ‘กฤจฉราติกฤจฉร’ หรือมิฉะนั้นพึงถือพรตจานทรายณะเป็นการไถ่บาป
Vyāsa (narratorial voice) conveying dharmaśāstric injunctions within the Kurma Purana’s teaching frame
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Indirectly: by insisting on expiation for even unintended harm, it supports the Kurma Purana’s dharmic view that purity of conduct (śuddhi) is essential for inner clarity conducive to realizing the Self.
It highlights preparatory discipline rather than meditation techniques: prāyaścitta (kṛcchrātikṛcchra or cāndrāyaṇa) functions as ethical-ascetic purification that stabilizes the mind, a prerequisite for higher yogic and devotional practice in the Purāṇa’s framework.
Not explicitly; however, the shared Purāṇic dharma-ethic of ahiṃsā and purification underlies the text’s broader Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis, where devotion and yoga rest on a common moral foundation.