Hello,
There's a great saying by Lord Vishnu " Unless you know me as your self, you do not know me at all "
Worshiping idol is just a waste of time for who doesn't know his self Vishnu is pervading in all bodies and it is one without any duality. Speaking precisely, there's a difference between worshiping Knowledge and worshiping god's form. It is Nirguna and Saguna bhakti. These two are interconnected, among them Nirguna is the highest. When devotee worships his form, by the grace of god, ultimatelly, he gets an insight of his Nirguna Unmanifest nature, which is the highest and stated in Veda as Vishnu's absolute abode. At the end, acquiring advaita bhakti, he realizes himself as Brahman and eternally establishes in that nature. You may call it unimagined bhakti where there's no difference between devotee and god. They are so much loved by each other that they are now one.
Lord Vishnu in Bhagavata:
"I am present in every living entity as the Self. Those who neglect or disregard this omnipresence and engage themselves in the worship of the Deity in the temple, they are only making a show of themselves. That is like offering oblations into ashes instead of in the Fire. He who thinks of Me, residing in the bodies of other's, as different from his Self can never attain peace of mind. He never pleases Me even if he worships with proper rituals and paraphernalia. As long as one does not realise the omnipresent Me as resident in His own heart, so long has he to worship Me through images, performing all his prescribed duties." (#s III – 29: 21 to 25)
Hari Om!
There's a great saying by Lord Vishnu " Unless you know me as your self, you do not know me at all "
Worshiping idol is just a waste of time for who doesn't know his self Vishnu is pervading in all bodies and it is one without any duality. Speaking precisely, there's a difference between worshiping Knowledge and worshiping god's form. It is Nirguna and Saguna bhakti. These two are interconnected, among them Nirguna is the highest. When devotee worships his form, by the grace of god, ultimatelly, he gets an insight of his Nirguna Unmanifest nature, which is the highest and stated in Veda as Vishnu's absolute abode. At the end, acquiring advaita bhakti, he realizes himself as Brahman and eternally establishes in that nature. You may call it unimagined bhakti where there's no difference between devotee and god. They are so much loved by each other that they are now one.
Lord Vishnu in Bhagavata:
"I am present in every living entity as the Self. Those who neglect or disregard this omnipresence and engage themselves in the worship of the Deity in the temple, they are only making a show of themselves. That is like offering oblations into ashes instead of in the Fire. He who thinks of Me, residing in the bodies of other's, as different from his Self can never attain peace of mind. He never pleases Me even if he worships with proper rituals and paraphernalia. As long as one does not realise the omnipresent Me as resident in His own heart, so long has he to worship Me through images, performing all his prescribed duties." (#s III – 29: 21 to 25)
Hari Om!
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