There is no doubt that the "true"
reality or status of the "Gods" is the subject of much
theologic-interpretive debate in practically all religious traditions.
The notion of an initial (though not necessarily prior in time)
"naive" stance that posits the reality of separately
and outwardly existing, superhuman beings, is then gradually remapped
or esotericized by the overlay of various forms of esoteric meaning
and interpretation that reveals to the initiate the "true"
meaning of these beings. So the naive believer who enters the
shrine believes somehow that the deity both resides outwardly,
"in" the shrine, and in some kind of unimaginable but
physically outward or separate space ("heaven"). However,
the initiated" priest/whatever gently but in a superior way
rejects and perhaps corrects such naive views.
The move away from the naive perspective (though again these things do not happen this way necessarily in time: these are an attempt at the depiction of a series of logical movements in religion) believes itself to be more sophisticated and takes an esoteric approach that radically denies the "externality" of the Gods and internalizes the "outer." It thus reveals the Gods and their attributes as a map of inner mental and psychological processes. These processes can and do encompass the functioning of so-called ordinary awareness, but also and often more interestingly are thought to depict the stages in the evolution of consciousness, particularly the ascent of mystical consciousness toward whatever goal of mysticism a particular tradition envisions.
These two stages exist in practically all religious traditions, though, in fact, it may be that at some point the "logical" order above is actually reversed, and one begins with the sophisticated, esoteric viewpoint of a charismatic founder or revealed scripture which is then appropriated and "stepped down", so to speak, to be made accessible and comprehensible to the naive beginner, and, in the process, may be understood by the sophisticated to be distorted, misunderstood, or damaged.
The history of religions actually shows us that the above two stances do not fully encompass in a satisfactory way what is going on in most sophisticated religious traditions, particularly if these are understood as two mutually exclusive religious perspectives, the second of which "sublates" or radically undermines the reality of the first.
In my own studies of the great Shaivite theologian and Maha Siddha from medieval Kashmir, Abhinavagupta, I have long posed this question to myself: when Abhinava refers to Shiva is he referring to a deity in the naive sense above or is he referring to some psychological reality of the functioning of the human mind and spirit? Of course, there is no doubt as one reads the texts of Abhinava to notice that he is involved in a radical process of esoteric re-interpretation of traditional Shaivism. While the earlier sadhakas of the radical left-handed Tantra believed themselves to undergo violent possession by Goddesses external to them, Abhinava insists on a re-mapping of the entire panorama of these "lesser" understandings of tantric sadhana into the "inner" domain of consciousness. Hence, the notion of the shakti-cakra or vortex-wheel of consciousness that Abhinava proposes: Bhairava (a form of Shiva) seated at the center of the adepts consciousness pulsates outward rays of light which take the shape of the various forms of the Goddess (in this case Kali). The adept is to envision and discover this Shakti-cakra as the most fundamental description of the true reality of consciousness etc etc. Thus, in this situation neither "Bhairava" or "Shiva" or "Kali" are being understood in any exoteric or outward sense. They name the fundamental structures of the very consciousness of the adept who is to discover, unfold, and explore these potentialities within hir-self. Thus, for Abhinava, "Shiva" is not usually the name of a superhuman deity in the "naive" sense above, but is rather a term he manipulates with great dexterity to refer to the indescribable and paradoxical abyss of the absolute consciousness within which the limited and contracted forms of individual consciousness take shape.
However, that this re-mapping and transformation of the exoteric religious vocabulary into the esoteric processes of Shaivite meditation takes place, does NOT necessarily mean that the notion of Shiva (or more precisely of various subsidiary forms of Shiva) as separate superhuman beings of a godly sort disappears. To the contrary, side by side with such patently esoteric and psychological (or psycho-spiritual) re-mappings of Shiva, Bhairava and Kali, there appear in the Tantraloka repeated references to various kinds of divine beings whom Abhinava clearly (or at least apparently to this reader) means us to understand in the so-called "naive" or "external" way.
So even in the religious world
of someone as esoterically inclined and as hyper-sophisticated
as Abhinava, there appears to be the idea that the Gods actually
ALSO do exist outwardly (granted, in some more sophisticated and
nuanced way, but still in not that different a version from the
initial "naive" notion of such gods that exists in the
ordinary practitioner worshipper.) Hence, the so-called "naive"
position that we began with above, turns out, upon entry even
into this most sophisticated world of esoteric Tantra, either
not to be any longer so naive, or at a minimum, to represent a
still present piece of the Tantric worldview: the Gods actually
do exist as superhuman and unimaginably powerful beings: and that
that stance is not any longer "primitive", naive, or
uninformed. It is simply the acceptance that this universe also
contains such beings as "Gods" within it. So for Abhinava
it does not appear incongruous that just as the Absolute consciousness
appears to have split itself into the various individual forms
of human consciousness that inhabit our universe, so too that
supreme consciousness has actually (though still apparently) split
itself or allowed for there to evolve within itself vast numbers
of "divine" life-forms that constitute the reality of
the Gods.
All I am saying is the following:
I write this with some energy
and yet a great degree of hesitancy. I have struggled for years
to coordinate in my mind my growing sense of the accuracy of what
I say above to the writings of Abhinavagupta. Of course, there
are many ways to try to counter such an attempt at interpretive
complexity and nuancing. Is he writing in the "voice"
of the naive believer at places and hence he adopts a vocabulary
and approach that matches their naïve predilection for an
actual outer divinity to actually exist? Perhaps. But I think
the situation is much more complex. In his world, at least, it
is never either/or; it is always both/and. I think that there
are at least four potential or logical "stances" that
might be taken on this matter.
To delineate them I resort to my own appropriation of the Buddhist
tetralemma:
All of these can function as "true"
or cogent religious assertions, depending on the stance of the
one who makes the assertion.
As follows:
Particularly in the case of Abhinava,
he is often mistaken as making assertion #2 above, when, in fact,
I take him to be making a much more sophisticated and encompassing
non-dual assertion #4 (while also taking stance #3 in much of
his writing.) To say this is NOT to deny that he engages in an
extensive process of psycho-esoteric re-mapping. However, he does
so in the midst of a stance of non-duality that would never require
him to make such re-mappings as exclusively sublating of the position
of stance #1.
I believe that such confusions of level are to be found in many
interpreters of religious traditions (whether the interpreters
are "internal" theological interpreters or "external"
scholarly interpreters). These interpretive confusions are of
various kinds:
I would argue that the "initial" move toward esotericization
represented by stance #2 has been many times confused by interpreters
with the much broader, encompassing and inclusive move toward
a "mature" esotericization that is represented by the
non-duality of stance #4 (which will come "later" in
the text, tradition, or collective understanding.) Thus, the full
range of the esoteric re-mapping of a particular tradition is
foreshortened in the understanding of the interpreters.
Stance #4 itself has been often misunderstood as constituting
a sublative and destructive stance, when in actual practice we
find (again, for example in Abhinava) that after making potently
non-dual statements on the lines of stance #4 in his early sections
of the Tantraloka, he goes on to make statements throughout that
text that reveal him as firmly entrenched in the usefulness of
stance #3, and often, sounding an awful lot like he buys into
stance #2. Stance #3 has often been misunderstood as being incompatible
with stance #4, when as I have just said, both stances are often
present as "moments" of interpretation.