Īśvara-gītā: Antaryāmin, Kāla, and the Divine Ordinance Governing Creation, Preservation, and Pralaya
स सर्वलोकनिर्माता मन्नियोगेन सर्ववित् / भूत्वा चतुर्मुखः सर्गं सृजत्येवात्मसंभवः
sa sarvalokanirmātā manniyogena sarvavit / bhūtvā caturmukhaḥ sargaṃ sṛjatyevātmasaṃbhavaḥ
میرے حکم سے سب کچھ جاننے والا خودبھُو ہی تمام جہانوں کا خالق بنتا ہے؛ چہار رُخی صورت اختیار کر کے وہ یقیناً آفرینش کو رچتا ہے۔
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing the sages/Indradyumna-context narration on creation
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It presents creation as proceeding under the Supreme Lord’s ordinance: Brahmā, though “self-born,” functions as an empowered agent (niyoga) of the higher Ishvara who governs cosmic order.
The verse implies an Ishvara-centric discipline: contemplation on the inner ruler who appoints cosmic functions supports devotion (īśvara-bhakti) and steady meditation (dhyāna) on divine sovereignty, a foundation for Kurma Purana’s yoga-oriented teachings.
By stressing a single supreme ordinance behind creation, it aligns with the Purana’s synthetic theology: different divine forms and cosmic roles operate harmoniously under one ultimate reality, supporting a non-sectarian Shaiva–Vaishnava reading.