Means to Liberation: Supremacy of Hari, Proper Salutations, and Purāṇic Authority
हरिर्व्यासस्त्वेक एव व्यासस्तु हरिवत्स्मृतः / उपजीव्यतदीशत्वे तयोरेव न संशयः
harirvyāsastveka eva vyāsastu harivatsmṛtaḥ / upajīvyatadīśatve tayoreva na saṃśayaḥ
ഹരിയും വ്യാസനും തത്ത്വത്തിൽ ഒരേ; വ്യാസനും ഹരിസദൃശനായി സ്മരിക്കപ്പെടുന്നു. ആശ്രിതൻ–ഈശ്വരൻ എന്ന ബന്ധത്തിൽ ഇവരിരുവരിലും സംശയമില്ല.
Suta (narrator) or the Purana’s voice praising Vyasa and Hari (contextual encomium within Garuda Purana narration)
Concept: Hari and Vyasa are essentially one; the relation of upajīvya (supported/dependent) and īśa (Lord) is uniquely resolved here.
Vedantic Theme: Abheda (non-difference) with functional bheda (role-distinction) in īśa–jīva/āśraya–āśrita framing.
Application: Treat the Vyasa-tradition (scripture, guru-parampara) as divine authority; cultivate humility as dependent while honoring the Lordship principle.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.1.86-89 (hierarchy of salutation; limbs/instruments of Hari)
It establishes the Purana’s authority by declaring the compiler (Vyāsa) as non-different from Hari, making the teaching trustworthy and spiritually potent.
By grounding the text’s source in Hari/Vyāsa, it legitimizes the later instructions on death rites, karma, and the post-death journey as divinely reliable guidance.
Approach Garuda Purana teachings with reverence and discernment, treating them as a dharmic guide—especially when performing śrāddha, pinda-dāna, and ethical self-discipline.