Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
हीमवानुवाच शिवोमा परमा शक्तिरनन्ता निष्कलामला / शान्ता माहेश्वरी नित्या शाश्वती परमाक्षरा
hīmavānuvāca śivomā paramā śaktiranantā niṣkalāmalā / śāntā māheśvarī nityā śāśvatī paramākṣarā
喜马梵说道:“湿婆—乌玛乃至上神力——无尽、无分、无垢。她即是寂静本身;大自在天摩诃湿伐罗的主宰能量;恒常不变、永住不灭,乃至上不坏的真实。”
Himavān (the Himālaya, father of Umā)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It points to the highest reality as “paramākṣarā”—the supreme imperishable—described as partless, stainless, and eternal, indicating an ultimate principle beyond change that underlies all manifestation.
The verse provides the meditative lakṣaṇa (defining marks) for contemplation: fixing the mind on Paraśakti as śāntā (peace), niṣkalā (partless), and amalā (pure). Such attributes guide Pāśupata-style inward worship—stilling the mind and recognizing the divine as the inner, unconditioned reality.
Within the Ishvara Gita’s synthetic theology, the supreme is expressed through Śiva’s sovereignty (māheśvarī) and the imperishable absolute (paramākṣarā), a framing compatible with the Purana’s broader Shaiva–Vaishnava non-sectarian stance where the one supreme is praised through multiple divine forms.