Forms of polytheistic powers, gods, and demons
- Key People:
- Aedesius
- Related Topics:
- pluralism and monism
- nature religion
- henotheism
- god
Natural forces and objects
A widespread phenomenon in religions is the identification of natural forces and objects as divinities. It is convenient to classify them as celestial, atmospheric, and earthly. This classification itself is explicitly recognized in Vedic religion: Surya, the sun god, is celestial; Indra, associated with storms, rain, and battles, is atmospheric; and Agni, the fire god, operates primarily at the earthly level. Sky gods, however, tend to take on atmospheric roles—e.g., Zeus’s use of lightning as his thunderbolt.
In the earliest cultural levels, in which hunting and then pastoralism and agriculture are clearly vital, religion exhibits these identifications in rites connected with fertility. The sun’s vitality is seen in the cyclical effects of causing things to grow and wither. Moreover, because of its dominance of the world, the sun is often seen as all-knowing, and thus sky gods of various cultures tend to be highly powerful and knowledgeable, if also sometimes rather remote. The sky is also often associated with creation. By contrast the moon is rarely of the same importance (though in Ur, a city of ancient southern Babylonia, the moon god Sin was supreme). The role of the sky god in ensuring food and in providing light and warmth, over against the chaotic effects of darkness, was a theme of various myths of the cosmic drama and was one main reason for the connection in mythic thought between creation and light.
Heavenly divinities have also been influential in the development of astrology, which assigns a special significance to stars and planets. In the Middle East astrology was important but was weakened by monotheism, and in Indian culture it came to be deeply woven into the fabric of both Hinduism and Buddhism. Astrology was influential in the Greco-Roman world and in the astral religion attached to Gnosticism (dualistic sects that emphasized salvation through esoteric knowledge) and other cults of the early Christian era. Astrology was also elaborated in Central America, for instance in Aztec religion.
Gods of the sky become especially powerful when they take on an atmospheric guise. The association of gods such as Zeus and Indra with storm, as well as with fertility-bearing rain, makes their connection with warfare fairly natural; thus, Indra is the most perfect example of an Indo-European warrior. Many societies, however, have had separate gods of war. The ambivalence of atmospheric deities is paralleled in female counterparts who are both creative and destructive. The combination of sky and earth and the joining of differing cosmic forces are sometimes represented in the hieros gamos (“sacred marriage”)—e.g., between Apsu and Tiamat in Mesopotamia, Shiva and Shakti in India, and Gaea and Uranus in Greece. The forces of water and fire are particularly significant in bridging the gap between the earthly and heavenly realms. Fire is manifested not only in the hearth but also in lightning and the sun, and water is sometimes connected with the moon. Thus, earthly fire and water can also be seen at work higher in the cosmos.
Important in the development of fertility religion were the “dying and rising” gods, such as Adonis, Attis, Osiris, and Tammuz. Their cults had a new life in the mystery cults of the Greco-Roman world, where the original agricultural significance of the rites was transformed into more personal and psychological terms.
On earth, besides the divine mother out of whose womb plant life has its birth, there are a host of divinities connected with agricultural and pastoral life. In addition, sacred significance is often attached to features of the particular environment in which a given group finds itself. Thus, sacred mountains, such as Olympus in Greece, have their resident deities, and a river, such as the Ganges (Ganga), may be divinized. Underground rivers have special significance in connecting with the underworld, or nether regions, which can be important as the place of repose of the dead but also as the matrix for the re-creation of life. Geographical locations can also have cosmic significance; e.g., Delphi, Greece, was known as the navel of the earth. Further, many cultures have gods and goddesses associated with the sea.
Vegetation
In a number of cultures trees are seen as a primordial form of vegetation and have a symbolic connection both with heaven and earth; sometimes they are held to contain spirits, as the yakshas of Indian tradition. Particular sorts of trees, such as the ashvattha, or pipal (sacred fig), are held in special veneration. Among plant deities, however, probably the most important are those connected with cultivated plants, such as corn (maize) in Central America and the vine in the Mediterranean world. Notable is the cult of Dionysus, the ecstatic wine god who became one of the most influential objects of devotion in the Classical period. The vine linked agriculture and ecstasy. The connection between vegetation and dying and rising gods has already been noted; to some extent such motifs were carried over into Christianity in the notion that the cross was the tree both of death and of new life. One of the most obvious modern survivals in the West of vegetation cults is the use at the winter solstice of mistletoe, symbolizing fertility and continued life.