Means to Liberation: Supremacy of Hari, Proper Salutations, and Purāṇic Authority
षद्विंशतिसहस्राणि मुनीनामूर्ध्वरेतसाम् / तेषां शिष्यप्रशिष्याणां संख्या वक्तुं न शङ्क्यते
ṣadviṃśatisahasrāṇi munīnāmūrdhvaretasām / teṣāṃ śiṣyapraśiṣyāṇāṃ saṃkhyā vaktuṃ na śaṅkyate
Il y a vingt-six mille sages, ascètes brahmacārī (dont l’énergie vitale est tournée vers le haut). Le nombre de leurs disciples et des disciples de leurs disciples ne peut être énoncé.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vainateya)
Concept: Brahmacarya/ūrdhva-retas and disciplined asceticism generate spiritual potency and sustain expansive teaching lineages.
Vedantic Theme: Ojas/tejas as a support for steadiness of mind; saṅgha/paramparā as a vehicle for transmitting liberating knowledge and devotion.
Application: Cultivate restraint and conservation of energy (brahmacarya in broad sense), respect teacher-student lineages, and participate in communities that preserve study and practice.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana frequently praises ṛṣis and paramparā as authorities for dharma and afterlife teachings; numerical hyperbole used to convey magnitude
This verse highlights ūrdhvaretas as a defining mark of powerful munis, implying that disciplined conservation and sublimation of vital energy supports spiritual attainment and authoritative teaching lineages.
By stating a fixed number of munis but an uncountable number of disciples and grand-disciples, the verse emphasizes how a small body of realized teachers can generate vast, expanding traditions of instruction.
Respect authentic teacher–student lineages, practice self-restraint and ethical discipline, and prioritize steady spiritual study so that knowledge is preserved and transmitted responsibly.