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Goddess Lakshmi With Narsimha Aarti Virtual Pooja


4.8 ( 7488 ratings )
Style de vie Divertissement
Développeur Rikhil Jain
Libre

Goddess Lakshmi With Narsimha Aarti Virtual Pooja
Lakshmi Maa Pooja Lakshmi Pooja is a temple, mandir, mata nu mandir to worship the goddess without going to maandir. You can do live aarti, live darshan at your mobile finger tips. Application contain Lakshmi Maa wallpaper and devotee can worship her. All things together acts as a live wallpaper too. When navratri can devotees get active with dandiya, raas, garba to make happy Lakshmi Maa
See Application Fuctions Are Listed Below:
1). You can play shank.
2). You can play bell / Ghant / Ghanta.
3). You can play aarti with small ganti / bell.
4). Flowers to offer.
5). You can offer flowers mala also.

About Lakshmi Maa:

Lakshmi is the Hindu goddess of wealth, fortune, and prosperity (both material and spiritual), as well as the embodiment of beauty. She is the wife and active energy of Vishnu. Her four hands represent the four goals of human life considered important to the Hindu way of life – dharma, kāma, artha, and moksha. Representations of Lakshmi are also found in Jain monuments. In Buddhist sects of Tibet, Nepal, and southeast Asia, goddess Vasudhara mirrors the characteristics and attributes of the Hindu goddess Lakshmi with minor iconographic differences. Lakshmi is also called Srim or Thirumagal because she is endowed with six auspicious and divine qualities, or Gunas, and also because she is the source of strength even to Vishnu. When Vishnu incarnated on the Earth as the avatars Rama and Krishna, Lakshmi incarnated as his respective consorts: Sita (Ramas wife), Radha (Krishnas lover) and Rukmini (Krishnas wife). In the ancient scriptures of India, all women are declared to be embodiments of Lakshmi. The marriage and relationship between Lakshmi and Vishnu as wife and husband, states Patricia Monaghan, is "the paradigm for rituals and ceremonies for the bride and groom in Hindu weddings". Archaeological discoveries and ancient coins suggest the recognition and reverence for goddess Lakshmi in the Scytho-Parthian kingdom and throughout India by the 1st millennium BC. Lakshmis iconography and statues have also been found in Hindu temples throughout southeast Asia, estimated to be from second half of 1st millennium AD. In modern times, Lakshmi is worshiped as the goddess of wealth. She is also worshipped as the consort of Vishnu in many temples. The festivals of Diwali and Sharad Purnima (Kojagiri Purnima) are celebrated in her honor.