Means to Liberation: Supremacy of Hari, Proper Salutations, and Purāṇic Authority
उपसाधको नरः प्रोक्तो यतोतस्तदनन्तरम् / नम्य इत्यच्यते सद्भिस्तारतम्येन सर्वदा
upasādhako naraḥ prokto yatotastadanantaram / namya ityacyate sadbhistāratamyena sarvadā
إلى ذلك الحدّ يُسمّى الرجل «أوباسادهَكة» (upasādhaka) أي الخادم الملازم. ثم بعده مباشرةً يصفه الصالحون دائمًا بأنه «نَمْيَا» (namya)—أي الجدير بالتحية والخضوع—بحسب تدرّج الاستحقاق والفضل.
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda)
Concept: Tāratamya (gradation) in honor: service/attendance matures into worthiness of reverence as merit increases.
Vedantic Theme: Adhikāra-bheda (differences of qualification) and saṃskāra-based elevation through right conduct.
Application: Serve sincerely before seeking status; recognize and honor genuine merit without envy, using respectful speech and conduct.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.1.75-76 (salutations as meritorious; order of reverence); Garuda Purana 3.1.78-79 (special reverence to Vyāsa)
This verse frames ‘namya’ as a higher status than mere service—one becomes worthy of reverent salutation when recognized by the virtuous, reflecting a merit-based spiritual dignity.
It states that titles like ‘upasādhaka’ and ‘namya’ are applied according to degrees of worthiness, implying that honor and reverence follow an ethical-spiritual hierarchy rather than being automatic.
Serve sincerely (upasādhaka) and cultivate conduct that makes one genuinely worthy of respect (namya); also, offer reverence discerningly—honoring virtue and integrity.