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Vishnu and Lakshmi
Vishnu is one of the three supreme deities in Hinduism, known as the Preserver God who sustains cosmic order, righteousness and stability, preventing the universe from collapsing into chaos. Depicted as a blue-skinned god with four arms, he holds iconic symbols including the discus, conch shell, mace and lotus, rides the divine bird Garuda, and resides in the heavenly abode Vaikuntha. To save the world from evil and disasters, Vishnu descends to earth in ten major avatars, with Rama and Krishna being the most renowned ones, representing justice, wisdom and universal love.
Lakshmi, the divine consort of Vishnu, is the Hindu goddess of wealth, prosperity, good fortune, beauty and marital bliss. She emerged from the Samudra Manthana (the Churning of the Ocean of Milk), a legendary event where gods and demons strived for the elixir of immortality, and chose Vishnu as her eternal partner. Usually portrayed as an elegant four-armed goddess dressed in red robes, she sits on a lotus, holds lotuses in two hands, and blesses devotees with wealth and auspiciousness with the other two; elephants often accompany her, symbolizing purification and abundance.
The pair, also worshipped as Lakshmi Narayan, are inseparable in Hindu belief. Vishnu symbolizes cosmic order and divine protection, while Lakshmi represents material and spiritual prosperity, signifying that true prosperity can only exist under the maintenance of righteousness. They are regarded as the ideal model of marriage, and Lakshmi is the central deity worshipped during Diwali (the Festival of Lights), when devotees pray for her blessings of wealth, happiness and good luck. Their stories and images are widely recorded in classic Hindu scriptures such as Vishnu Purana, Ramayana and Mahabharata. |
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