Beyond Anthropomorphic Divinity: Why Hindu Iconography Transcends Abrahamic Understanding The Historical Misunderstanding When medieval travelers from Abrahamic lands first encountered Hindu temples, they were confronted with something their religious framework had not prepared them to comprehend. The multi-armed Durga, the elephant-headed Ganesha, the half-man half-lion Narasimha—these forms seemed bizarre, even monstrous, to eyes trained to see divinity only in human form. Their accounts often described Hindus as worshipers of demons or grotesque creatures, revealing not the reality of Hindu practice but the limitations of their own theological vocabulary. This misunderstanding was not merely aesthetic but philosophical. The Abrahamic traditions, having emerged from desert monotheism, developed a strict hierarchical view: one God, separate from creation, who made humans in His image. This anthropocentric theology creates an unbridgeable gulf between the divine and the natural worl...