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Life & Wisdom Quote by Rabindranath Tagore

"Your idol is shattered in the dust to prove that God's dust is greater than your idol"

About this Quote

Icon worship gets no mercy here: Tagore imagines devotion as something so brittle it has to be broken to do its job. The line is almost violently tactile - "shattered", "dust" - dragging religion out of incense and into debris. It is not a gentle reminder to be humble; it is an intervention. The idol falls not because God is petty, but because the human need to make the infinite manageable keeps curdling into possession.

The cunning move is the reversal of value. Dust is usually what remains after meaning has burned away. Tagore flips it: "God's dust" is greater than your idol. In other words, the least, most overlooked residue of the divine outranks the most polished object of your worship. That phrasing attacks a familiar temptation in both temple religion and modern life: treating the symbol as the substance, the container as the sacred thing itself. The idol can be a statue, but it can just as easily be a nation, a leader, a career, even a self-image. Anything you can point to and say, "This is it", is suspect.

Tagore wrote as a Bengali poet shaped by the Bhakti tradition and the reformist currents of the Brahmo Samaj, in a colonial moment when identity, faith, and public ritual were being renegotiated. His spiritual humanism distrusts intermediaries that harden into authority. The shattering is the painful grace of disillusionment: a forced demotion of what we can hold, so attention can return to what can't be owned.

Quote Details

TopicGod
Source
Verified source: Stray Birds (Rabindranath Tagore, 1916)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Your idol is shattered in the dust to prove that God's dust is greater than your idol. (Item/aphorism no. 51 (page number varies by printing; see notes)). This line appears as #51 in Rabindranath Tagore’s Stray Birds (English version translated by Tagore). The Library of Congress catalog record confirms the primary-source publication details for the 1916 Macmillan (New York) edition and provides a downloadable scan/PDF of the book. Within the work, the text is identified by its sequence number (“51”) rather than a stable page citation; page numbers can differ between printings/editions and some digitizations. For text verification, Wikisource’s transcription of the 1916 Macmillan edition also shows the quote at item 51.
Other candidates (1)
... Your idol is shattered in the dust to prove that God's dust is greater than your idol . ( Stray Birds , v.50-51 ,...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Tagore, Rabindranath. (2026, February 9). Your idol is shattered in the dust to prove that God's dust is greater than your idol. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/your-idol-is-shattered-in-the-dust-to-prove-that-9743/

Chicago Style
Tagore, Rabindranath. "Your idol is shattered in the dust to prove that God's dust is greater than your idol." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/your-idol-is-shattered-in-the-dust-to-prove-that-9743/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Your idol is shattered in the dust to prove that God's dust is greater than your idol." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/your-idol-is-shattered-in-the-dust-to-prove-that-9743/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Rabindranath Add to List
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About the Author

Rabindranath Tagore

Rabindranath Tagore (May 6, 1861 - August 7, 1941) was a Poet from India.

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