Cosmic Manifestation, Mahāmāyā’s Mandate, Varṇāśrama-Dharma, and the Unity of the Trimūrti
ऋचो यजूंषि सामानि तथैवाथर्वणानि च / ब्रह्मणः सहजं रूपं नित्यैषा शक्तिरव्यया
ṛco yajūṃṣi sāmāni tathaivātharvaṇāni ca / brahmaṇaḥ sahajaṃ rūpaṃ nityaiṣā śaktiravyayā
رِک، یَجُس کے منتر، سام کے گیت اور اسی طرح اَتھروَن کے بھجن—یہ برہمن کی فطری صورت ہیں؛ یہی اس کی ابدی، غیر فانی شکتی ہے۔
Lord Kūrma (Viṣṇu) instructing the sages/Indradyumna in Purāṇic discourse style
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It presents the Supreme (Brahman) as expressing an innate, eternal manifestation through Śruti—the four Vedas—indicating that revelation is not external to the Absolute but a natural mode of its power (śakti).
No specific technique is taught in this verse; it establishes the scriptural foundation for yoga and dharma—treating the Vedas as Brahman’s imperishable śakti—thereby grounding disciplines like Pāśupata-oriented devotion, japa, and contemplation in Śruti authority.
By locating ultimate authority in Brahman and its eternal śakti (Śruti), the verse supports the Purāṇa’s non-sectarian synthesis: Śiva- and Viṣṇu-centered paths are validated insofar as they align with the same Vedic, Brahman-rooted truth.