Varnāśrama-Krama, Vairāgya as the Ground of Saṃnyāsa, and Brahmārpaṇa Karma-yoga
तस्मात् सर्वप्रयत्नेन तत्र तत्राश्रमे रतः / कर्माणीश्वरतुष्ट्यर्थं कुर्यान्नैष्कर्म्यमाप्नुयात्
tasmāt sarvaprayatnena tatra tatrāśrame rataḥ / karmāṇīśvaratuṣṭyarthaṃ kuryānnaiṣkarmyamāpnuyāt
پس جس جس آشرم-دھرم میں کوئی قائم ہو، وہ پوری کوشش سے ایشور کی رضا کے لیے کرم کرے؛ اسی سے نَیشکرمْیہ (عمل سے ماورا حالت) حاصل ہوتی ہے۔
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) instructing sages (Kurma Purana dharma-teaching context)
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It implies that liberation is not achieved by mere outer inactivity, but by inner freedom from doership and bondage: when actions are offered to Īśvara, one reaches naiṣkarmya—acting without karmic attachment, which aligns the mind with the Self’s unattached nature.
The verse highlights karma-yoga within varnashrama: disciplined performance of one’s prescribed duties with īśvara-tuṣṭi (God-pleasing intention). This purifies the mind (citta-śuddhi) and supports higher yogic absorption by reducing egoic agency.
By centering practice on Īśvara (the Lord) rather than sectarian identity, it reflects the Kurma Purana’s integrative stance: devotion and offering to the one Supreme Lord—understood across Shaiva-Vaishnava idioms—leads to the same liberating naiṣkarmya.