Īśvara-gītā: Antaryāmin, Kāla, and the Divine Ordinance Governing Creation, Preservation, and Pralaya
हव्यं वहति देवानां कव्यं कव्याशिनामपि / पाकं च कुरुते वह्निः सो ऽपि मच्छक्तिचोदितः
havyaṃ vahati devānāṃ kavyaṃ kavyāśināmapi / pākaṃ ca kurute vahniḥ so 'pi macchakticoditaḥ
阿耆尼承载献给诸天的供献(哈维亚),也传送献给祖灵的祭供(卡维亚);并且成就烹煮之事——然而即便此火,亦唯由我之神力所驱使。
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing the interlocutors (Indradyumna and/or the assembled sages) on divine agency behind ritual and cosmic functions
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It teaches that even powerful cosmic functions—like Agni’s carrying of offerings and transforming food—operate through the Supreme Lord’s śakti, implying the indwelling Self as the ultimate enabler behind all action.
The verse points to īśvara-kartṛtva-buddhi (seeing the Lord as the true agent), a foundational contemplative stance supporting Pāśupata-style devotion and yogic discipline: perform karma (yajña, śrāddha, daily rites) while inwardly attributing efficacy to the Lord’s power.
By grounding ritual efficacy in the one Supreme śakti, it supports the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis: whether worship is framed in Śaiva or Vaiṣṇava terms, the single Lord’s power is the operative reality behind devas, pitṛs, and cosmic forces like Agni.