Prākṛta-pralaya, Pratisarga Doctrine, and the Ishvara-Samanvaya of Yoga and Devotion
तां तां शक्तिं समाधाय स्वयं देवो महेश्वरः / करोति देहान् विविधान् ग्रसते चैव लीलया
tāṃ tāṃ śaktiṃ samādhāya svayaṃ devo maheśvaraḥ / karoti dehān vividhān grasate caiva līlayā
自在主摩诃伊湿伐罗亲自摄取此此彼彼之力,显现种种身相;同样地,他亦以神圣的戏游(līlā)将其收摄吞没。
Narrator/Teacher voice within the Purāṇic discourse (describing Mahēśvara/Īśvara as the agent of manifestation and dissolution)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It presents Īśvara as the sovereign Self who freely assumes powers (śakti) to project embodied forms and then reabsorbs them—implying that manifestation and dissolution occur within the Lord’s own being, not outside Him.
The verse supports a contemplative stance central to Purāṇic yoga: meditating on Īśvara as the inner controller who takes up and withdraws forms through śakti. This steadies vairāgya (dispassion) by seeing the body-world as līlā and encourages devotion (bhakti) joined with discernment (viveka).
By centering Mahēśvara as the supreme agent while the Kurma Purana overall harmonizes sectarian views, it aligns with the text’s synthesis: the one Īśvara is praised through Śaiva names and functions, without denying the broader Vishnu-centered Purāṇic framework.