Īśvara-gītā: Vibhūtis of the Supreme Lord and the Paśu–Paśupati Doctrine of Bondage and Release
अहं ब्रह्मविदां ब्रह्मा स्वयंभूर्विश्वतोमुखः / मायाविनामहं देवः पुराणो हरिरव्ययः
ahaṃ brahmavidāṃ brahmā svayaṃbhūrviśvatomukhaḥ / māyāvināmahaṃ devaḥ purāṇo hariravyayaḥ
برہما کے جاننے والوں کے لیے میں ہی برہما ہوں—سویَمبھو، وِشوَتومُکھ۔ میں ہی دیو ہوں، مایا کا مالک؛ قدیم ہری، اَویَی۔
Lord Kurma (Vishnu as Īśvara, teaching the Īśvara-gītā)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It presents the Supreme as self-existent, all-pervading, and imperishable—identifying the Lord as the very ground known by brahma-vids, beyond decay and limitation.
The verse emphasizes contemplative recognition (jñāna-yoga) of Īśvara as omnipresent and as the master of Māyā—supporting meditation on the Lord as viśvatomukha (all-faced) and avyaya (unchanging), a key orientation for later Pāśupata-style discipline and devotion.
By declaring the one Īśvara as the source of cosmic functions (including the Brahmā-aspect) and as Hari, the verse supports the Purāṇa’s non-sectarian stance: one Supreme reality manifests multiple divine roles, harmonizing Shaiva and Vaishnava theology.