Virocana–Bali, Aditi’s Tapas, and the Vāmana–Trivikrama Episode
दास्ये तवेदं भवते पदत्रयं प्रीणातु देवो हरिरव्ययाकृतिः / विचिन्त्य देवस्य कराग्रपल्लवे निपातयामास जलं सुशीतलम्
dāsye tavedaṃ bhavate padatrayaṃ prīṇātu devo hariravyayākṛtiḥ / vicintya devasya karāgrapallave nipātayāmāsa jalaṃ suśītalam
“我以侍奉之心奉上这三步之地;愿不朽之身的主哈利欢喜。”他如此思惟,便轻柔地将清凉之水倾注在主那柔嫩的指尖之上。
Narrator (Sūta/Vyāsa tradition) describing a devotee’s ritual service to Lord Hari
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
By calling Hari “avyayākṛti” (imperishable in form/nature), the verse points to the Supreme as undecaying and stable—beyond change—while devotion expresses alignment with that unchanging reality through reverent service.
The key practice is mindful devotional action: “vicintya” (having reflected) before offering water indicates worship done with inward contemplation—karma-yoga infused with bhakti, where attention and purity of intent are integral.
Though Hari is explicitly worshiped, the Kurma Purana’s broader teaching frames such worship as dharmic and yogic—compatible with Pāśupata and Vaiṣṇava paths—emphasizing practical unity through disciplined devotion rather than sectarian conflict.