Varnāśrama-Krama, Vairāgya as the Ground of Saṃnyāsa, and Brahmārpaṇa Karma-yoga
नाहं कर्ता सर्वमेतद् ब्रह्मैव कुरुते तथा / एतद् ब्रह्मार्पणं प्रोक्तमृषिभिः तत्त्वदर्शिभिः
nāhaṃ kartā sarvametad brahmaiva kurute tathā / etad brahmārpaṇaṃ proktamṛṣibhiḥ tattvadarśibhiḥ
“میں کرنے والا نہیں؛ یہ سب کچھ برہمن ہی اسی طرح انجام دیتا ہے”—اسی کو حقیقت بین رشیوں نے ‘ب्َरहمارپن’ یعنی سب کچھ برہمن میں سپرد کرنا کہا ہے۔
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing the listener(s) in a non-dual, devotion-integrated discipline of action
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It asserts akartṛtva: the true Self is not an individual doer; all activity is ultimately grounded in Brahman, so realization shifts identity from ego-agency to the Absolute.
It points to Karma-Yoga framed as brahmārpaṇa—performing duties while relinquishing doership and offering actions (and their fruits) to Brahman, a practical contemplative discipline aligned with Purāṇic yoga.
By centering Brahman as the sole ultimate agent, it supports the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis: Shiva and Vishnu are approached as expressions of the one Supreme Reality, making devotion compatible with non-dual insight.