In Defence of Polytheism
I started thinking about polytheism as a consequence of a
discussion I had with someone I once met at a University. He was a follower of
a monotheistic religion and was unable to understand how people could believe
in many gods.
For very long, the discussion used to come back to me every now and then, but I could never divine a proper justification, not that I truly
felt the need for a justification. Just yesterday, I had a discussion with a
friend that led to the crystallization of my idea of god. To me, god is a
collection of attributes I value. If that collection or a sufficient part of
collection exists in a human or animal or symbol, that entity or symbol to me
is god.
Symbolism has been much reviled and become a word that
people do not want to associate with. This is because symbolism has been
hijacked by tokenism. Tokenism and symbolism are not the same. For instance, a
piece of stone in the shape of Shiva is worshipped. Unfortunately, people
worship the piece of stone itself rather than what it symbolizes. They believe
that offering fruits, leaves, devotion etc. to the stone itself would bring
them benefits. This is also disturbing at a different level. Because you see,
Shiva is just a means to an end for them. There is a crass selfishness in their
devotion.
What I believe should instead be worshipped is as follows.
The snake around Shiva’s neck indicates a person who is able to meditate even
with a snake (also seen as the desires and temptations and distractions)
hissing in his ear. The deer held firmly in his hand indicates a mind that is
steady, a mind that does not hop about like a deer. The third eye indicates
wisdom and penetration. The burning of the god of love, Kama, by opening the
third eye is not a story of external manifestation of power, but a story of the
power to see through the illusion of lust and to burn it at its source. There
are of course other symbols, the interpretations of which I am not aware of.
But the point I wish to make is we should learn to understand symbols and not
blindly worship them devoid of understanding.
Coming back to the original topic, polytheism is important
because different people value different attributes and may wish to develop
each to a different measure. Polytheism allows each person to select a set of
beliefs that are most dear to that person. For one, it may be education, for
another compassion and empathy. I think it does not matter too much what it is.
Polytheism grants so much more freedom. The only condition being that it be
properly understood.
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