Prākṛta-pralaya, Pratisarga Doctrine, and the Ishvara-Samanvaya of Yoga and Devotion
प्रयागस्य च माहात्म्यं क्षेत्राणामथ कीर्तिनम् / फलं च विपुलं विप्रा मार्कण्डेयस्य निर्गमः
prayāgasya ca māhātmyaṃ kṣetrāṇāmatha kīrtinam / phalaṃ ca vipulaṃ viprā mārkaṇḍeyasya nirgamaḥ
Dito isinasalaysay ang kadakilaan ng Prayāga, ang pagpapahayag ng karangalan ng mga banal na pook, at ang saganang bungang espirituwal ng mga kabutihang iyon—O mga brāhmaṇa—gayundin ang pagpanaw ni Mārkaṇḍeya: ito ang mga paksa rito.
Suta (narrator) summarizing the upcoming/ongoing section for the assembled sages
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
This verse is a topic-marker for tīrtha-māhātmya and phala (spiritual results); it does not directly define Ātman, but frames dharmic means—such as pilgrimage and kṣetra-praise—as supports for inner purification that traditionally prepares one for Self-knowledge.
No explicit yoga-technique is taught in this line; it emphasizes tīrtha-sevā and kṣetra-kīrtana as dharmic disciplines whose “vipula phala” is understood to aid mental purity and devotional focus—often treated as preparatory (sādhana) alongside mantra, japa, and vrata in Purāṇic practice.
This verse does not mention Śiva or Viṣṇu directly; it reflects the Purāṇic synthesis indirectly by valuing sacred geography and merit discourse that, across the Kurma Purana, is shared by both Śaiva and Vaiṣṇava sacred frameworks.