Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
लक्ष्म्यादिशक्तिजननी शक्तिचक्रप्रवर्तिका / त्रिशक्तिजननी जन्या षडूर्मिपरिर्जिता
lakṣmyādiśaktijananī śakticakrapravartikā / triśaktijananī janyā ṣaḍūrmiparirjitā
Siya ang Ina na pinagmumulan ng mga kapangyarihang nagsisimula kay Lakṣmī; Siya ang nagpapakilos sa gulong ng mga banal na śakti. Siya ang bukal ng tatlong śakti, ngunit Siya mismo ang di-nakagapos na pinagmulan, nalampasan na ang anim na alon ng karanasang makamundo.
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) teaching in the Ishvara Gita discourse
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
By describing the supreme principle as the source of all śaktis yet untouched by the ṣaḍūrmis, the verse points to an Atman/Ishvara that is causally efficacious in the world while remaining transcendent and unbound by embodied fluctuations.
The emphasis is on overcoming the ṣaḍūrmis—an inner Yogic victory central to Pāśupata-oriented discipline: stabilizing awareness beyond hunger, thirst, grief, delusion, aging, and death through devotion, discrimination, and absorption in the supreme Śakti/Ishvara.
In Ishvara Gita style, the supreme is presented as the one source of all divine powers (including Lakṣmī) and as the transcendent Lord taught by Kūrma—supporting the Kurma Purana’s synthesis where sectarian forms are expressions of one non-dual, supreme reality.