The Vaikhansas believe that ''bhakti'' (devotion) alone is not enough and that in this age proper icon worship is necessary to attain self-realization. S. K. Ramachandra Rao believes that it is possible that the focus of the Vaikhanasas on the icon-worship maybe the catalyst that gave birth to the Vaishnava movement led by Ramanujacharya in the south. Evolving from the Vedic era, the Vaikhansas have adopted icon worship at home and the temples, having recognized the need for a permanent structure for conducting the divine rituals, but they have equally carried on their respect for the ''Vedas'' and have incorporated the ''Vedas'' in the rituals of temple worship. They recognize the authority of the ''Vedas'' so much so that they do not even call their texts or tradition as Agama, but call their scripture as simply ‘''Bhagavaca-Shastra''’. | The Vaikhansas believe that ''bhakti'' (devotion) alone is not enough and that in this age proper icon worship is necessary to attain self-realization. S. K. Ramachandra Rao believes that it is possible that the focus of the Vaikhanasas on the icon-worship maybe the catalyst that gave birth to the Vaishnava movement led by Ramanujacharya in the south. Evolving from the Vedic era, the Vaikhansas have adopted icon worship at home and the temples, having recognized the need for a permanent structure for conducting the divine rituals, but they have equally carried on their respect for the ''Vedas'' and have incorporated the ''Vedas'' in the rituals of temple worship. They recognize the authority of the ''Vedas'' so much so that they do not even call their texts or tradition as Agama, but call their scripture as simply ‘''Bhagavaca-Shastra''’. |