Devadāru (Dāruvana) Forest: The Delusion of Ritual Pride, the Liṅga Crisis, and the Teaching of Jñāna–Pāśupata Yoga
अज्ञानाद् यदि वा ज्ञानाद् यत्किञ्चित्कुरुते नरः / तत्सर्वं भगवानेन कुरुते योगमायया
ajñānād yadi vā jñānād yatkiñcitkurute naraḥ / tatsarvaṃ bhagavānena kurute yogamāyayā
جہالت سے ہو یا معرفت سے—انسان جو کچھ بھی کرتا ہے، وہ سب کچھ بھگوان ہی اپنی یوگ مایا کی शक्ति سے کراتا ہے۔
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching in the Ishvara Gita context
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It teaches that the ultimate agency behind all actions is Bhagavān alone; individual doership is secondary and conditioned, while the Supreme Self remains the inner ruler who enables action through Yoga-māyā.
The verse points to Yoga as discernment of true agency: meditation and self-inquiry reduce egoic doership, aligning the practitioner with Ishvara-bhāva (God-centered awareness) central to Kurma Purana’s Yoga-shāstra orientation.
By grounding all agency in one Bhagavān acting through Yoga-māyā, it supports the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis where the Supreme (spoken as Vishnu/Kurma) is also the same highest Lord revered in Shaiva frameworks.