Demigods Are Devotees of God: Difference between revisions
Visnu Murti (talk | contribs) (Created page with ") Category:All Categories - Vaniquotes Category:Wanted Categories - Vaniquotes") |
SharmisthaK (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Category:Devotees of God - Umbrella Category | [[Category:Demigods Are...]] | ||
[[Category:Devotees of God]] | |||
[[Category:Demigods - Umbrella Category]] | |||
[[Category:Devotees of God - Umbrella Category]] | |||
[[Category:Characteristics of Devotees of God - Umbrella Category]] | |||
[[Category:All Categories - Vaniquotes]] | [[Category:All Categories - Vaniquotes]] | ||
Latest revision as of 06:11, 4 February 2019
Pages in category "Demigods Are Devotees of God"
The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total.
T
- The demigods are devotees of Lord Krsna, and therefore the curses of the demons were futile
- The demigods are devotees of Lord Visnu (visnu-bhaktah smrto daiva), whereas the demons (asuras tad-viparyayah) are always against the visnu-bhaktas, or Vaisnavas
- The demigods are devotees of the Lord for the sake of material possessions, but although the demons apparently do not have the SPG on their side, He always acts as their well-wisher by depriving them of their positions of false prestige
- The devotee demigods and the demons (asuras) once took a sea journey. On this journey, nectar and poison were produced, and Lord Siva drank the poison. BG 1972 purports
- The distinction between the demigods (devas) and demons (asuras) is that the demigods are all devotees of Lord Visnu whereas the demons are devotees of demigods like Lord Siva, Goddess Kali and Goddess Durga
- The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Lord Visnu, was on the side of the demigods because the demigods were His devotees, whereas the demons did not care about Lord Visnu
- Those who are Vaisnavas, they are demigods. Demigod does not mean that something extraordinary. Anyone who is Vaisnava, devotee of the Supreme Lord, he is demigod. That is the statement of Vedic literature