Devadāru (Dāruvana) Forest: The Delusion of Ritual Pride, the Liṅga Crisis, and the Teaching of Jñāna–Pāśupata Yoga
ततो द्रक्ष्यथ देवेशं दुर्दर्शमकृतात्मभिः / यं दृष्ट्वा सर्वमज्ञानमधर्मश्च प्रणश्यति
tato drakṣyatha deveśaṃ durdarśamakṛtātmabhiḥ / yaṃ dṛṣṭvā sarvamajñānamadharmaśca praṇaśyati
แล้วท่านทั้งหลายจักได้เห็นพระเป็นเจ้าแห่งเทพ ผู้ยากจะประจักษ์แก่ผู้มิได้ฝึกตนภายใน เมื่อได้เห็นพระองค์แล้ว อวิชชาและอธรรมทั้งปวงย่อมสิ้นไป
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing the sages/seekers
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It implies that true vision of the Supreme Lord (Ishvara) is inaccessible to the unrefined mind; when that vision arises through inner discipline, ignorance (ajñāna)—the root cause of misidentification of the Self—collapses.
The verse emphasizes ātma-saṃskāra (inner refinement): self-control, purification, and steadiness of mind—core prerequisites in the Kurma Purana’s Yoga-oriented teaching (often aligned with Pāśupata/Shiva-oriented discipline while affirming Vishnu as Ishvara).
By focusing on Ishvara as the transcendent “Lord of the gods” who destroys ajñāna and adharma, the verse supports the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis: the highest reality is one, approached through devotion and yogic purification whether expressed in Shaiva or Vaishnava idiom.