Hinduism - What Is Vadagalai?

 


The Tengalai is one of the two primary subsects of the Shrivaishnava religious group.

The Shri vaishnavas are worshippers of the deity Vishnu (bhakta), and their origins may be traced back to the Alvars, a group of twelve poet-saints who lived in southern India during the seventh and tenth centuries and wrote devotional poems.

The Alvars' religious outpouring was structured and systematized by the philosopher Ramanuja (11th century), who is regarded as the Shrivaishnava founder, two centuries later.

Ramanuja believed that Brahman, or Supreme Reality, was a personal god rather than an impersonal abstract concept, and that the most significant kind of religious activity was devotion (bhakti).

His philosophical position, Vishishthadvaita Vedanta, emphasized both of these convictions, and thus stood in opposition to the Advaita Vedanta school, which was founded by the philosopher Shankaracharya and believed that the Supreme Being was impersonal and that realization (jnana) was the best spiritual path.

The Tengalais and Vadagalais parted many centuries later due to opposing perspectives on what a person must accomplish to achieve ultimate soul release (moksha).

The Vadagalais emphasize not just God's redemptive power, but also that the person must react to that grace and take an active part in his or her own salvation.

The Tengalais, on the other hand, stress the requirement for total submission (prapatti) to God's favor, by which devotees are rescued without having to do anything.

~Kiran Atma


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