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Surrendering to God's will entails both the surrender of our will to His, in His sovereignty over all things, in which His ways of operating and thinking prevails over humanity's and Satan's. Secondarily, the surrender of one's will is evidenced by the acknowledgement of God's will for our personal lives in even the smallest decisions.
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Depiction of a Vaishnava, a performer of this practice. Sharanagati (Sanskrit: शरणागति; IAST: Śaraṇāgati) or Prapatti (Sanskrit: प्रपत्ति; IAST: Prapatti), is the process of total surrender to God (Narayana-Krishna) in the tradition of Vaishnavism.
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In a word, to surrender oneself is to die to everything and to self, to be no longer concerned with self except to keep it continually turned toward God. To surrender oneself is, moreover, no longer to seek oneself in anything, either for the spiritual or the physical, that is to say, no longer to seek one's own satisfaction, but solely the ...
The underlying message of this work suggests that the way to know God is to abandon consideration of God's particular activities and attributes, and be courageous enough to surrender one's mind and ego to the realm of "unknowing", at which point one may begin to glimpse the nature of God.
A 33-year-old man was charged Monday for allegedly setting on fire and killing a woman on a New York subway train in what authorities called a “brutal murder” and an example of “depraved ...
Viveka-dhairyāśraya: "On discernment, steadfastness, and surrender to God" Śrī-kṛṣṇāśraya: "Surrendering to Krishna" Chatuḥślokī: "Four Verses" Bhakti-vardhinī: "Growing devotion" Jalabheda: Nineteen types of orators; Pañca-padyāni: Three types of listeners; Sannyāsa-nirṇāya: "Deciding on renunciation"