The Significance of Deities
and Deity Worship
Deities play an important
part in most temples of Krishna. But what is
the significance of Deities and Deity worship? One thing to understand is that
all the images or Deities in the Vedic pantheon, as found in the temples, are
made according to explicit details and instructions found in the Vedic texts.
Then they are installed in the temple in an elaborate ceremony wherein the Divine
personalities are called to appear in the form of the Deity. Some of the
Deities are demigods, while others, such as Krishna,
Vishnu, or Ramachandra, are forms displaying various pastimes of the Supreme
Being.
Some
people, however, do not believe that God has a form. But many verses in the Puranas and particularly the Brahma-samhita establish that the
Supreme Being does have specific forms according to His pastimes. These texts
also describe His variegated features, which include His spiritual shape,
characteristics, beauty, strength, intelligence, activities, etc. Therefore, it
is considered that the authorized Deities of the Supreme that are shaped
according to these descriptions provide a view of the personal form of God.
Those
who have no knowledge of God or His form will certainly consider the temple Deities
as idols. But this is because they think that the Deities are simply the
products of someone’s imagination. Of course, there are those who say that God
has no form, spiritual or material, or that there is no Supreme Being. Others
think that since God must be formless, they can imagine or worship any material
form as God, or they regard any image as merely an external representations of
the Supreme. But images such as those of the demigods are not additional forms
of an impersonal God, nor are they equal to God. All such people who think in
the above mentioned ways have resorted to their own imagination to reach such
conclusions and are, therefore, idolaters. The imaginary images and opinions of
God that are formed by those who have not properly learned about, seen, or
realized God are indeed idols, and those who accept such images or opinions are
certainly idolaters. This is because these images or opinions are based on
ignorance and are not a true likeness of the Supreme Being’s personal form.
Nonetheless,
God is described in the Vedic literature, which explains that God is sat-chit-ananda vigraha, or the form of
complete spiritual essence, full of eternity, knowledge, and bliss, and is not
material in any way. His body, soul, form, qualities, names, pastimes, etc.,
are all nondifferent and are of the same spiritual quality. This form of God is
not an idol designed from someone’s imagination, but is the true form, even if
He should descend into this material creation. And since the spiritual nature
of God is absolute, He is nondifferent from His name. Thus, the name Krishna is an avatara or incarnation of Krishna in the form of sound. Similarly, His form in the
temple is not merely a representation, but is also qualitatively the same as Krishna as the archa-vigraha, or the worshipable
form.
Some
people may question that if the Deity is made from material elements, such as
stone, marble, metal, wood, or paint, how can it be the spiritual form of God?
The answer is given that since God is the source of all material and spiritual
energies, material elements are also a form of God. Therefore, God can manifest
as the Deity in the temple, though made of stone or other elements, since He
can transform what is spiritual into material energy, and material energy back
into spiritual energy. Thus, the Deity can easily be accepted as the Supreme
since He can appear in any element as He chooses. In this way, even though we
may be unqualified to see God, who is beyond the perceptibility of our material
senses, the living beings in this material creation are allowed to see and
approach the Supreme through His archa-vigraha
form as the worshipable Deity in the temple. This is considered His causeless
mercy on the materially conditioned living beings.
In this
manner, the Supreme Being gives Himself to His devotees so they can become
absorbed in serving, remembering and meditating
on
Him. Thus, the Supreme comes to dwell in the temple, and the temple becomes the
spiritual abode on earth. In time, the body, mind and senses of the devotee
become spiritualized by serving the Deity, and the Supreme becomes fully
manifest to him or her. Worshiping the Deity of the Supreme and using one’s
senses in the process of bhakti-yoga, devotional service to the Supreme,
provides a means for one’s true essential
spiritual nature to unfold. The devotee becomes spiritually realized and the
Deities reveal Their spiritual nature to the sincere souls according to their
spiritual development. This can continue up to the level in which the Supreme
Being in the form of the Deity engages in a personal relationship and performs
reciprocal, loving pastimes with the devotee, as has previously taken place
with other advanced individuals.
At
this stage, having darshan or seeing
the Deity is not simply a matter of looking at the Deity in the temple, but to
one who is spiritually realized it is a matter of experiencing the Deity and
entering into a personal, reciprocal relationship with the Supreme Personality
in the form of the Deity. At that stage, you may view the Deity, but the Deity
also gazes at you, and then there is a spiritual exchange wherein the Deity
begins to reveal His personality to you. This is what separates those who are
experienced from those who are not, or those who can delve into this spiritual
exchange and those who may still be trying to figure it out. For those who have
experienced such an exchange with the Supreme or His Deity, at this stage the
worship of the Supreme Being in the Deity moves up to a whole different level,
with no limits as to the spiritual love that can be shared between the devotee
and the Deity.

No comments:
Post a Comment