The concept of Širk:
what it meant before Islam
(Paper read at the annual
conference of the Société Européenne pour l’Astronomie Culturelle, Bath UK
2016; published in Dharma Dispatch, Bengaluru, 12 August 2019)
 Abstract: 
 The cardinal sin in Islam
is Širk, ‘associating (a creature with the Creator)’,
roughly ‘polytheism’. Without the use of this same word, the same condemnation
is already present in the first of the Biblical Ten Commandments. In this
paper, we trace the early and later history of the concept of Širk among those
who deliberately practised it. This is a standard job of philological research
within the history of ideas, and of philosophical ‘concept clarification’. We
illustrate the ancient use of the term with examples both from the time and
culture when the corresponding phenomenon was indeed given that name, as well
as from other cultures where it also existed.
The Semitic
word Širk, first known from
inscriptions in Ugarit (ca. 1500 BCE), means ‘the act of associating’, viz. of
a deceased king or hero with a star/god. When somebody had earned fame, he
became part of the collective consciousness, just like the starry sky. The background
is the anciently near-universal deification of the heavens: star-worship was
the most common form of polytheism, partly rivalling and partly overlapping
with ancestor-worship.
However, Širk in the literal sense has
been fading away because of the demystification of the starry sky, either gradually
through the natural development of the scientific worldview, or more abruptly
through the introduction of monotheism. Yet, the principle remained operative
in many religions even after they had emancipated themselves from literal
star-worship. It is at that stage of development that we must situate the almost
synonymous Greek word Apotheōsis, ‘elevation to godhood’. A fully secularized
remnant can be seen in early modern European astronomy. While the Bible still
allows star worship for the non-Israelites, the Qur'ân universally
prohibits it (as does Christianity implicitly). But even in a metaphorical
sense, ‘associating a mortal with the Eternal’, it was now tabooed by
monotheism. This way, Širk evolved from a near-universal practice of
connecting the stars with the collective consciousness, to the sin par
excellence.
The cardinal sin in Islam is Širk, ‘associating (a creature with the
Creator)’, ‘polytheism’. Thus,
sun-worship means offering worship to a creature, putting it on the Creator’s
throne. In this
paper, we trace the early and later history of the concept of Širk (rhymes with French cirque, not with English shirk). It is a standard job of
philological research within the history of ideas, and of philosophical ‘concept
clarification’. We illustrate the ancient use of the term with examples both
from the time and culture when the corresponding phenomenon was indeed given
that name, as well as from other cultures including Hindu astromythology, which
has developed this concept furthest; and, in secularized version, from modern European
astronomy. 
Širk as polytheism
The Arabic word širk comes from the root š-r-k,
‘to associate’, which we find back in šarīk, ‘companion’, and šarika, ‘a company’. In the Qur’ān it appears with the specific
theological meaning ‘associating a creature with the Creator’. Someone who does
this, is a mušrik (participle), an ‘associator’, effectively
a ‘polytheist’. Since Islam
affirms the total incommensurability of the Creator with His creation, it
rejects this association and considers it the most fundamental sin. 
This core principle of Islam, the rejection
of polytheism in favour of strict monotheism (tawḥīd, ‘declaring
something to be one’, from wāḥid, ‘one’) is already present in the
Bible. The same condemnation of polytheism, though not using the word širk, and the same affirmation of God’s
unicity is formulated in the first of the Ten Commandments: ‘Thou shalt have no
other gods before me, for I am a jealous god.’ (Exodus : ). It led to the central
Jewish prayer: ‘Hear Israel, thy God is one.’ Whatever the differences and
hostilities between Judaism and Islam, they agree on this fundamental outlook
of strict monotheism. 
(Christianity makes the same claim, yet
from the Jewish and Islamic viewpoint it does not live up to its claim, for it
literally ‘associates a creature with the Creator’, viz. Jesus Christ, whom it
calls ‘God’s incarnation’ or ‘God’s only-begotten son’. To Islam, a family
relation between a finite and mortal creature and its infinite and eternal
Creator is absurd.)  
Apotheōsis
The Semitic word širk is first known as carrying a theological meaning from
inscriptions in a Northwest-Semitic dialect in Ugarit, ca. -1500. There it
means ‘the act of associating’, viz. of a deceased king with a star/god. When
somebody had earned fame, he became part of the collective consciousness, just
like the starry sky. After his death, his fame survived him, and so he was
still part of the collective consciousness, now no longer as a living presence
but as a memory rendered visible through identification with a specific star.
Or in theological parlance: through association with the god located in that
specific star. 
With or without having such a simple term,
this phenomenon of an eternalizing projection of heroes onto the heavens existed
in ‘Pagan’ cultures worldwide. While Semitic polytheism is long dead, ancient
and modern astronomy give some well-known examples. For centuries, and
certainly today, širk in the literal
sense has been fading away, partly through the natural demystification of the
starry sky, partly through its forcible desacralization by monotheism. 
More broadly, the principle remained
operative in many religions even after they had emancipated themselves from
literal star-worship. A well-known example is the Greek word Apotheōsis, ‘elevation to godhood’. 
Star-worship was the most common form of
polytheism, partly rivalling and partly overlapping with ancestor-worship. In
the Bible, star worship is still explicitly allowed for the non-Israelites, in
the Qur'ān, by contrast, it is
universally forbidden. (see below) This way, širk evolved in status from a near-universal practice of connecting
the stars with the collective consciousness, to the sin par excellence. 
| 
Gods 
All known civilizations have a concept called ‘god’, plural or
  singular. These gods are a category of beings deemed endowed with far more
  power and a vastly larger longevity than us human beings. For the rest, their
  characters and functions may vary. 
The operative meaning of ‘a god’ in human life is the personification
  of an important collective factor difficult to negotiate, and which you have
  to take into account in the things you plan to do. So you had better stay
  friends with them by paying them attention or sacrificing to them. This
  principle is then generalized, and gods can be personifications of any
  category of beings or entities. 
A god is powerful in that he can impact your life. But in a
  polytheistic pantheon he is not all-powerful, because he has to share his
  power with other gods. Rarely if ever is he seen as ‘the Creator’ who stood
  outside the universe and fashioned it from nothing. Rather, he himself is a
  part of the universe. Creation is normally seen as only a transformation from
  formless matter to the present world of form, and in that process, gods may
  play their part. In that limited sense, the world’s mythologies have plenty
  of ‘creation’ stories, but even they assume that the universe as a whole has
  always been there, even if it may cyclically become unmanifest or submerged
  in chaos, only to reappear as a well-ordered universe again.  
In the most basic level of mankind’s myths, ‘both
  heaven and earth as well as the ocean are clearly preexistent.’ (Witzel
  2013:361) This primordial layer of the world’s myths has been termed ‘Gondwanan’
  by Michael Witzel, the more advanced layer ‘Laurasian’. This layer developed
  a notion of ‘emergence from chaos’ (rather than ‘creatio ex nihilo’) of the world, yet ‘it is
  important to observe that neither the Gondwana High God, nor the Eurasian (Father)
  Heaven, nor the Amerindian Great Spirit is a creator god:
  they do not create the universe or the world, and they leave its
  establishment to later demiurge deities.’ (Witzel 2013:360)  
Prophetic monotheism gradually developed
  this idea: ‘the emergence of the biblical single god and creator took shape
  only during the second part of the first millennium BCE, clearly under Zoroastrian
  Persian influence’. (Witzel 2013:360) With this innovation and its later
  elaboration by theologians came the idea of the ‘creation ex nihilo’
  by an extra-cosmic God, an idea too heady for most Laurasian let alone
  Gondwanan cultures. It is an exclusively Biblical-Quranic belief,
  further propagated by thinkers who elaborated the Biblical or Quranic
  assumptions, that a single Supreme Being, in a single moment never to be
  repeated, created the whole universe from nothing.   
Gods are imagined to be endowed with personalities befitting the
  element of which they are the personification. As such, they are also
  sensitive to gifts and flattery, and may thus be influenced into exercising
  their power in a partisan, friendly way. That is why people who would never
  think of appeasing the stormy sea, do devise rituals to appease the sea god,
  hoping that he will guarantee smooth sailing. 
Star worship 
In writing, the idea of ‘a god’ is first attested in the Sumerian
  ideogram Dingir, which has the
  physical form of a radiant star, four straight nails at 45° distance. (Apart
  from dingir, it can also have the
  pronunciation an, ‘sky’.) It
  certainly has the meaning ‘god’, for it is used as the common determinative
  for a whole class of names signifying gods. This usage as a determinative was
  also adopted in the cuneiform writing systems of Akkadian and Hittite. The
  symbol still lives on as part of the logo of the Yezidi religion. 
That, at any rate, was anciently how a divine being was conceived: as
  a radiant heaven-dweller. Because a star is radiant and stands in heaven,
  near-permanently visible to all, it is a part of our collective
  consciousness, our shared frame of reference; which is what the function of a
  pantheon was. 
In neighbouring Akkadian, a Mesopotamian dialect of Semitic. the
  Sumerian ideogram Dingir was read
  as Ilu or El, originally meaning ‘a power’. We know this word very well
  through Hebrew, a northwestern (Levantine) dialect of Semitic. Thus the names
  Ur-i-el, ‘my light is God’; Gabr-i-el, ‘my strength is God’; Rapha-el, ‘God heals’; Mi-cha-el, ‘who is like God?’ But as
  we shall see, these names now carry a meaning of ‘God’ that has resulted from
  a revolution, viz. from poly- to monotheism, severing the immediate
  connection with the stars. 
However, anciently, El had
  been member of a pantheon, the father of the other gods. As father-god, El was identified with Saturn, the slowest
  visible planet, and concomitantly called ‘the Old One’, grey and wise. His
  son Ba’l (‘lord’, form of address
  for Hadad, ‘noise’) was likewise
  identified with Jupiter: ‘El
  represents the principle of preservation and balance and Baal that of action
  and progress. Without the first principle, the world would return to chaos
  and power would be uncontrollably unleashed. Without the second, life would
  wither away in torpor and stagnation. Baal's physical appearance is
  contrasted with that of El. El is a 'bull' with powerful horns and a thick
  white beard. (…) Baal, on the other hand, is a ‘bull-calf’ with thin horns
  and narrow beard. (…) He is above all the storm-god.’ (Caquot and
  Sznycer 1980:12) (This name is probably, through the Phoenician settlements
  in coastal Western Europe, also the origin of the Germanic god-name Balder, i.e. Ba’l addir, ‘mighty
  lord’.) 
A derivative of El is Eloha, ‘a deity’, ‘a god’. We know it
  mainly through the plural form Elohim,
  ‘gods’, ‘pantheon’. The Arab form of the term ha-eloha, ‘the deity’, is al-Ilāh,
  also ‘the deity’. Thence the Moghul emperor Akbar’s Indian city name Ilāh-ābād (wrongly anglicized as Allahabad), ‘divine city’. In
  contracted form, al-Ilāh becomes Allāh, ‘thé deity’, ‘the god par
  excellence’. 
A star, like a god, is, as far as a mortal can tell, eternal: it
  existed before we were born and goes on existing after we have died. As
  suggested by the extreme longevity of the physical stars, gods are
  proverbially deemed immortal. Hence the binary: us mortal earthlings versus
  the immortal heaven-dwellers. 
In Babylon and in Harran, each planet was worshipped in a temple of
  its own. Not all cultures went that far and became that explicit in their
  identification of stars with gods, yet the general association of gods with
  stars was pretty universal and assumed as a matter of course. Stars were
  explicitly recognized as gods by prominent philosophers like Socrates and
  Plato.  
The Indo-European gods 
The same meaning of ‘star’, ‘radiant heaven-dweller’, is present in
  Vedic Sanskrit Deva, ‘the shining
  one’ (from div-, ‘shine’, whence
  Sanskrit divas, Latin dies, ‘day’); hence ‘a god’. It is
  also etymologically present in cognate words like Latin Deus, ‘a god’. One of the Sanskrit terms for ‘astrologer’, at
  least since its mention in the 4th-century dictionary Amarakośa, is Daiva-jña,
  ‘knower of the gods’, or in practice, ‘knower of destiny’. Another is Daiva-lekhaka, ‘gods-writer’, ‘destiny-writer’,
  i.e. horoscope-maker. Obviously, the stars here were seen as gods regulating
  man’s destiny. (Note also that planets are called graha, ‘seizer’, like a ghost coming to possess you, a god
  impressing you with his impact.) 
A derived secondary root is dyev-,
  whence Dyaus, ‘heaven (-god)’,
  related to Greek Zeus, Latin Jupiter, Gothic Tiwaz (a specific Germanic god, whence ‘Tuesday’), Norse Tivar, ‘gods’ in general. It is widely
  thought that jyoti, ‘light’, (whence
  jyotiṣa, ‘astronomy’, ‘astrology’, originated as a colloquial form of *dyauti. 
A parallel development, but omitting (or only implying) the original
  link with the stars, is found in Slavic Bog,
  ‘the share-giver’, ‘the apportioner’, ‘the destiny-decider’, related to
  Sankrit Bhaga, and hence to the
  derivative Bhagavān. Other
  god-names are more derived from the practice of worshipping, such as the
  Germanic counterpart God, ‘the
  worshipped one’, related to Sanskrit Huta.
  Or the Greek Theos, ‘god’ (< *thesos), related to Latin festus, ‘celebration’; feriae, ‘holiday’, i.e, ‘religious
  feast’; to Germanic disir, ‘goddesses’;
  and to Sanskrit dhiṣā, ‘daring,
  enthusiastic’, dhiṣaṇā, ‘goddess’, dhiṣṇya, ‘devout’. But even here, a
  stellar connection reappears, for the latter word is also a name of Śukra/Venus. 
More examples of the personification of heavenly phenomena as gods are
  found throughout the Vedas. The deities Mitra
  and Varuṇa represent the day sky
  (hence the sun, here remarkably called ‘the friend’) c.q. the night sky, with
  its stable sphere of the fixed stars, with its regular cycles representative
  of the world order. In Mazdeism, this Varuṇa
  is known through his appellative Ahura
  Mazda, ‘Lord Wisdom’, god of the world order. The Nāsatyas or Aśvins (‘horse-riders’)
  are thought to represent the two morning- or evening stars, Mercury and
  Venus, who ‘ride’ the sun, often likened to a horse. Uśa (related elsewhere to Eōs,
  Aurora, Ostara, and hence to ‘east’ and arguably ‘Easter’) represents the
  sunrise.  
Stellar references are explicit in the case of Sūrya, the sun, and of Soma/Candra, the moon; but less so in the
  case of Viṣṇu, ‘the all-pervader’
  (like the sun’s rays), though he has a solar quality; and Śiva (‘the auspicious one’, an
  apotropaeic flattery of the terrible Vedic god Rudra, ‘the screamer’, the mountain storm), who is the Candradhāra or ‘moon-bearer’, and the Somanātha or ‘lord of the moon’, who
  has a lunar, nightly quality. The navagraha
  or ‘nine planets’ (sun, moon, their two eclipse nodes, and the five visible
  planets) as a whole are a normal object of worship. The 12 Ādityas or ‘suns’ provide the template
  of the Zodiac. 
Hindu mythology is abundant and explicit in its stellar references. In
  other mythologies, this may have become more obscure, often because we only
  know them in bureaucratic fashion, through preserved narrative texts
  defective in conveying the experiential and practical meaning of gods for
  their worshippers. Still, witness this observation of the Greek high gods and
  of the Germanic gods (Aesir): ‘There
  are twelve Aesir. In ancient times,
  the number had more significance than the composition of the group. (…) The
  Greek pantheon counts twelve Olympians.’ (Ongkowidjojo 2016:245) The
  identification of the seven planets with the seven week-days is likewise
  well-known, after conquering the world starting from the Babylonian template. 
The Chinese divine firmament  
In a vague sense, Chinese civilization deified the starry sky, where
  the oldest known word for ‘gods’, 上帝 Shàngdì, ‘the powers on high’, originally referred to both ‘stars’
  and ‘ancestors’. The Chinese language makes no difference between singular
  and plural, so Protestant missionaries adopted it as their term for ‘God’.
  (This used to be contested by Confucians because Shàngdì never indicated the universe’s Creator, only its
  Controller/s.)  
An even less personal word is 天 Tiān: ‘heaven’, introduced as the usual term for the
  divine by the Zhou dynasty, -11th to -3rd century. The
  reigning emperor was half-deified as the 天子, Tiānzi, ‘son of Heaven’. The term was personalized by the Catholic
  missionaries as 天主 Tiānzhǔ, ‘heavenly boss’ = ‘God’.  
The adjoining Turks and Mongols traditionally worshipped Tanri, c.q. Tengri, which straddles the meanings of ‘heaven, blue sky’ and ‘god’.
  In Islamicized Turkish, Tanri means
  ‘God’ and is used in derivatives like ‘theology’. The Japanese use 天 Ten, ‘heaven’, to translate Sanskrit Āditya, ‘one of 12 solar deities’,
  e.g. Benzai-ten translates the
  Indian goddess Sarasvatī. The three main individual gods of the folk-Chinese pantheon embody the desired values of happiness, success and longevity. They are also identified with a specific celestial body. Either they are the three stars in the ‘tail’ of the Great Bear: or they are the three stars in the ‘belt’ of Orion; or they are as follows. The star of Fú (福), ‘fortune’, or Fúxīng 福星, refers to the planet Jupiter. Like in Babylonian astrology and its derivatives, the planet Jupiter was deemed auspicious, ‘the bringer of jollity’. The star of Lù (禄), ‘salary coming with rank’, ‘success’, also ‘progeny’, Lùxīng 禄星, is Mizar. The star of Shòu (壽), ‘longevity’, Shòuxīng 寿星, is the southern star Canopus.
Širk 
Heaven-worship is truly the universal religion, rivalled only by
  ancestor-worship. And even then, these two are intertwined. Like the stars,
  deemed a real influence in the astrological paradigm, cannot materially but
  only subtly affect human beings, the dead likewise can subtly affect you.
  That is why the Romans warned that you should not offend them: De mortuis
  nihil nisi bene, ‘of the dead nothing but good.’ 
Deceased ancestors are deemed to be in heaven, often actually
  associated with a specific star. When your father has died, you take your
  child on an evening walk, and when the stars appear, you point out one of
  them and say: ‘There is grandpa, watching over us.’ In the Vedic funeral
  ritual, a zone in the sky, in the Scorpio-Sagittarius area, is designated as
  the destination of the dead. 
The association of a deceased mortal with an ‘immortal’ star is known
  in Semitic as širk. The word širk is first known from inscriptions
  in Ugarit, Syria (ca. 1500 BCE), and means ‘the act of associating’, viz. of
  a deceased king or hero with a star/god. It is from the Semitic root /š-r-k/ ‘to
  team up with, to join’ (Del Olmo Lete & Sanmartín 2015:88, ref. to De
  Moor & Spronk, 1982:179); cfr. South-Semitic/Arabic šarīk, ‘friend’ (Aartus 1985). In the text Legend of Kirtu, when king Kirtu
  lies dying, his wife says to his friends: ‘He is only a finger removed from
  his death, Kirtu is going to join [š-r-k] Ilu.’ (V:16-17, quoted in De Moor 1990:330; Ilu is an older form of Biblical El.) In nearby Hittite, with lots of Semitic influence, the expression kisat
  Dingir: ‘he became a god/star’, means: ‘he died’. 
A king who died henceforth lived on in association with a specific
  star. When somebody had earned fame, he became part of the collective
  consciousness, just like the starry sky. After his death, his fame survived
  him, and so he was still part of the collective consciousness, now no longer
  as a living presence but as a memory rendered visible through identification
  with a specific god or star. Or in theological parlance: through association
  with the god located in that specific star.  
The Mayas and the Pharaonic Egyptians systematically deified their
  deceased kings by identifying them with stars. Among the Pharaohs, the earliest
  dynasties ‘went to’ the circumpolar stars after death, later kings ‘went with’
  Ra, the sun god, or Osiris, god of the hereafter. In the Pyramid Texts, king Pepi 1 of Egypt’s 6th dynasty, ca.
  -2300, is said to have become Rigel (or Orion as a whole) after his death. In China, the three above-mentioned stars identified with a specific god, have also been interpreted by the Daoists as the place where important individuals from the past have been appointed for eternity. The star Fùxīng 福星 (Jupiter) is associated with an ancient governor who bravely protested against a cruel decree by the emperor; the star Lùxīng 禄星 (Mizar) may refer to an ancient official; and the star Shóuxīng 寿星 (Canopus) is sometimes identified with the philosopher Lǎozi.
In India, the stars of the Great Bear are identified, from antiquity
  till today, with seven of the ‘seers’ (Ŗṣis,
  inspired poets) who composed the Ŗg-Veda,
  collectively the ‘seven seers’ (Saptarṣi).
  Here again, the number is more important than the actual names, so in the
  premodern age different lists competed (details in Mitchiner 2000), with only the sages Atri and Vasiṣṭha as
  constants. The latter got identified with the star Mizar in the Great Bear’s tail
  (or in the Big Dipper’s handle), the centre of a multiple star, whose main
  partner Alcor is named after his wife Arundhātī,
  thus symbolizing marital fidelity. Another prominent Vedic seer who got eternalized as
  a star is Agastya, a sage known for
  his migration to the south, hence associated till today with the southern
  star Canopus. 
The seer Vasiṣṭha has left us some poetic imagery of how
  such deification should be conceived. He was the only Vedic seer to be many
  times the author, but once also the addressee of a hymn, thus implicitly
  becoming a god. But far from seeing this as something exceptional, he deems
  all seerhood as a form of temporarily participating in divine existence. So
  he went through this process of širk not just after his death, he described it
  himself: ‘When Varuṇa and I embark
  together and urge our boat into the midst of the ocean, we, when we ride over
  ridges of the waters, will swing before that swing and there be happy. Varuṇa placed Vasiṣṭha in the vessel and deftly with his might made him a ṛṣi/seer.’ (Ṛg-Veda 7:88:3-4) The
  vessel of the heavenly god Varuṇa
  signifies the seeming motion of the stars around the earth. Vasiṣṭha is associating his status as
  a ṛṣi with his elevation to the
  starry sky.  
In a passage of the Mahābhārata
  (tra. KM Ganguli 1997:IV.9) referring to the major ancient Indian philosophy,
  Sāṅkhya (‘enumeration’, viz. of the
  universe’s elements), this then-innovative system was extolled through a
  comparison with the well-known ancestral notion that sages move to heaven: ‘Those
  regenerate ones that follow the Sāṅkhya
  system enter into the superior state of Brahma like the celestials entering
  into the firmament.’ 
The Greek word apotheōsis, ‘elevation
  to godhood’, has roughly the same meaning as širk. Mortals thus deified among the stars include in mythology
  some characters of human origin, such as Hercules, Perseus, Andromede, or
  Ganymede, but there are historical cases too. Antinoos, Roman emperor
  Hadrian’s lover-boy, who drowned himself upon discovering his first beard
  hairs, was commemorated through a star in Aquarius.  
When in the 17th century the southern sky was mapped, one secularized
  case of širk took place. A
  constellation was named after the protection given to Vienna by the Polish king
  Jan Sobieski against the Ottoman siege: Scutum
  Sobieskii, ‘Sobieski’s shield’, now simply Scutum. The logic,
  which at once explains the Indo-European poetic ideal of ‘undying fame’
  (Greek kleos aphthiton, Sanskrit śravas akṣitam), is that one becomes
  immortal by one’s glorious deeds, and immortality is the key characteristic
  of gods. 
When William Herschel discovered the first planet beyond Saturn in
  1781, he named it Sidus Georgium to
  immortalize his sponsor, king George III. But as so often the latter’s fame
  proved less than undying, and outside England it was considered irrelevant, so
  the alternative name Uranus caught on. (Note, for contrast, the term Charles’
  Wain, meaning the Great Bear and wrongly thought to refer to Charlemagne or
  another king Charles; it really means ‘churl’s wain’, and contrasts with the ‘woman’s
  wain’, i.e. the Little Bear.) A more successful modern form of širk is the custom of naming asteroids
  and landscape features on planets after meritorious people. 
While present in many places, some limitations of the method of širk are also in evidence. Very few
  mortals ever succeeded in eternalizing themselves this way. Few readers will
  have heard of king Kirtu or pharaoh
  Pepi, and likewise in other
  civilizations, the most consequential individuals have not become known as
  star names. It is not through stars but through another calendrical
  ingredient that the Roman emperors Julius Caesar and Octavian Augustus
  acquired a place in our everyday consciousness: through the non-stellar month
  names July and August. 
Moreover, the mysterious nature of the starry sky, and thus its
  association with the afterlife, diminished as the mechanics of heaven became
  better known. Already in the Greek period, dissident freethinkers like the
  philosopher Anaxagoras and the playwright Aristophanes theorized that stars
  were only burning rocks. But the most decisive nail in the coffin of širk was the rise of a religious
  conception that denied any divine dimension to the starry sky: prophetic
  monotheism. 
Biblical monotheism versus polytheism 
The central innovation contained in the Bible is the replacement of
  polytheism with monotheism. This process is described in the Bible book Exodus and attributed to the
  leadership of Moses, ca. -1300. Here, the many gods were replaced with a
  single jealous god. Strangely, the plural form Elohim, ‘the gods’, ‘the pantheon’, survived this theological
  revolution. It became a kind of plurale
  majestatis with the meaning ‘God’. The Bible, which received its
  definitive form only under the Persian empire ca. -500, when this usage was
  well-established, starts with the sentence: ‘Berešit bara Elohim et ha-šamaim ve-et ha-aretz’, ‘In the
  beginning God created the heavens and the earth.’   
A synonym of Elohim,
  referring to the same jealous God, is Yahweh.
  Moses himself introduced this god-name into Biblical tradition. Though new to
  the Israelites after centuries in Egypt, it must have existed earlier among
  the Arab (South-Semitic) Beduins as well as among the Northwest-Semitic
  people of the Levant. Moses, when a fugitive from Egyptian law after he was
  found out to have committed murder, stayed with a Beduin tribe, the Midianites
  led by Jethro. They had a storm-god Yahweh,
  best translated (as pointed out by the path-breaking German Orientalist
  Julius Wellhausen) as a causative participle of a verb meaning ‘to move in
  the sky’, whether ‘to blow’ or ‘to stoop like a bird of prey’, from an Arab
  root  
Moses saw an apparition of this god in the burning bush. When Moses
  asks the god who he is, the god expresses his total sovereignty: ‘I am who I
  am’, ehyeh ašer ehyeh, as if
  saying: ‘It is none of your business who I am.’ Theologians and translators
  have contemplated this sentence profusely, until in ca. 1900, the German
  Orientalist Julius Wellhausen hit upon its probable original meaning: it
  elaborates a pun on the name Yahweh,
  which the Hebrews misinterpreted folk-etymologically as a causative
  participle of the verb  
At any rate, any stellar element in the Israelite conception of or
  terminology for the divine was herewith severed. In the Bible, the connection
  with the stars was not just abandoned but positively prohibited, at least for
  the Israelites. Strictly speaking, it was still allowed for the other
  nations: ‘Pay attention lest ye lift your eyes up to the sky for seeing sun, moon
  and stars, that ye be led astray and adore and serve them, those whom the
  Lord your God hath assigned to all the nations under heaven.’ (Deut. 4:19) 
With Christianization or Islamization, all divinity got invested in an
  extra-cosmic Supreme Being, the Creator. The planets were desacralized and
  reduced to cogwheels in a cosmic machinery set in motion by the Creator and
  operated by his angels. Though numerically, a very large part of humanity now
  espouses this desacralizing view through Christianity and Islam, it is quite
  exceptional in the history of religions.  
Do note a few remnants of širk
  in Christianity. Those individuals elevated to sainthood are given an
  abstract place in the sky, viz. a day on the Church’s Saints Calendar,
  corresponding to a specific degree of the Zodiac. Mary’s assumption into
  heaven, where she became ‘Queen of Heaven’ (which, like ‘Morning Star’, is a
  Christian borrowing from an epithet of Venus), is a typical case of širk; except that theologically
  conscious Catholics take care not to deify her: she is strictly speaking only
  ‘venerated’, not ‘worshipped’, even when prayed to for her ‘intercession’
  with the legitimately worshipped Father. Finally, the very core of
  Christianity, viz. Jesus’ divinity or association with God, whether as his ‘son’
  or ‘incarnation’, is the example par excellence of širk, not with a specific star but with a figurative interpreted ‘heaven’
  (eternity) as a whole. It is therefore condemned as de facto polytheism by both Judaism and Islam.  
 Širk in Islam 
The pre-Islamic religion of Arabia was largely star worship, combined
  with ancestor worship and the worship of special stones. The Ka’ba (‘cube’) housed a black stone
  deemed to have fallen from heaven, and peripherally also 360 idols. The main
  stellar deities were associated with the Ka’ba.
  The presiding deity of the temple was the moon-god Hubal. He was also described as al-Ilāh, contracted as Allāh,
  ‘thé deity’, ‘the god par excellence’. Originally it could refer to any
  earlier-mentioned god. Thus, Moḥammed’s Pagan father was called Abdullāh, ‘servant of the deity’,
  probably referring to his city’s chief deity, Hubal.  
Moon gods the world over are often depicted with three women, who may
  be called ‘wives’ or ‘daughters’ or even ‘mothers’. Thus, Western Wiccas and
  other neo-Pagans worship ‘the horned god’ (i.e. with the crescent moon in his
  hair) with his ‘triple goddess’. She represents the three phases of a woman’s
  life: as virgin, as mother and as crone. Among Hindus, the lunar god Śiva is called ‘he with the three
  mothers’ (tryambakam, from ambā, ‘mother’, Ṛg-Veda 7:59:12, thus Swami Veda Bharati 2014; often interpreted
  as ‘the three-eyed one’, so that responsible translators often leave it
  untranslated, e.g. Jamison and Brereton 2014:954), and is effectively
  depicted with three goddesses, though mostly separately, as in serial
  monogamy. In later Hinduism, these have become Pārvatī-Durgā-Kālī. The Vedas also tend to depict other goddesses
  in threesomes, such as Ilā-Bhāratī-Sarasvatī,
  or Guṅgu-Sinivālī-Rākā. The latter
  three women represent three phases of the moon: first crescent, full moon,
  and last moon-sickle disappearing into the sun/moon conjunction.  
Similarly, the three Meccan goddesses of Satanic Verses fame, al-Lāt,
  al-Uzza and Manāt, are also called the three ‘daughters of Hubal’. Alongside the three-phase
  scheme just sketched, they are understood as the main planets. Al-Uzza was a goddess of fertility and
  eroticism, quite like Aphrodite/Venus. Al-Lāt
  is often equated to the Sun, the female-solar counterpart of the male-lunar
  god Allāh/Hubal. But a full
  millennium earlier, Herodotos (Histories
  1:131:3) already interprets ‘Alilat’ (al-Ilāt,
  same development as Allāh from al-Ilāh) as Aphrodite. Manāt is equated with the stream of
  time and fate punctuated by the phases of the moon cycle. At any rate, allowing
  for a certain bandwith in their interpretation, they are part of the
  universal tradition of sky-worship.  
Moḥammed had forbidden his first converts to worship them, but then he
  developed second thoughts: he might win over many Meccans if only he made
  this concession of allowing them their favourite goddess triad. Quranic
  revelation 53:21-22, later repudiated by him as the ‘Satanic verses’, then
  came out in support of this toleration, stating that the goddesses’
  intercession with their Father (like Mary’s in Catholicism) is desirable. But
  his converts persuaded him that this would be unprincipled, so he improvised
  the explanation that any permission to worship these ‘exalted birds’ had been
  whispered into his ear by Satan. A new revelation replaced those two verses,
  denounced the goddesses as empty names without any reality, and then
  prohibited their worship for good.  
Moḥammed, in a bid to establish monotheism among the Arabs,
  reinterpreted Allāh as a synonym of
  Yahweh, the ‘jealous God’. He saw
  himself as the latest (and even last) one of the line of the prophets of Yahweh, renamed Allāh in Arabia. Since star worship was a common form of
  polytheism, the Qur’ān (6:78,
  22:18, 41:37) simply and strictly prohibited star worship: one should not
  worship the conspicuous heavenly creatures but their unseen Creator. This
  way, the star-god El, the Semitic
  reading of the star-shaped Sumerian glyph Dingir,
  ended up shedding his connection with the stars and becoming the disembodied
  extra-cosmic Creator-god Yahweh/Allāh. 
To give more detail, the star cult is universally forbidden in the Qur’ān,
  without distinction between believers and unbelievers. In verse 6:78, it is
  narrated how the exemplary prophet Abraham gives up Sun worship and turns to the
  sun’s Creator instead. In verse 22:18, the stars themselves (and likewise mountains,
  trees, animals) worship Allah. And in verse 41:37, it is assured that sun and
  moon are but signs of Allah, the reader is enjoined to worship their Creator
  instead. 
It is this zeal for abolishing all stellar references in religion,
  that made Mohammed opt for the following policies. He inverted the originally
  planetary-directed circumambulation of Ka’ba,
  where worshippers had been meant to revolve around the Ka’ba the way planets do (i.e. clockwise in the northern
  hemisphere): no celestial cycles! He fixed the time for one of his five daily
  prayers at night, so that it would not amount to sun worship. And he
  abolished the 13th intercalary month in the lunar calendar, which had been
  meant to keep lunar and solar cycles in lockstep: no moon worship! 
For this religious revolution, Moḥammed paradoxically revived a
  polytheistic concept par excellence, širk.
  Originally it had meant the association of a mortal with a star/god. Now it
  came to mean the association of any creature with the one Creator. No human
  or other being could be deified nor anyhow associated with an or the deity. This affected all known Pagan cults in one way or
  another, e.g. treating an imaginary elephant-headed creature as god (Gaṇeśa), or associating the hero Kṛṣṇa with the god Viṣṇu (as his ‘incarnation’). It even
  condemned Islam’s principal rival Christianity, where the mortal man Jesus
  was associated with the Creator, be it as his ‘son’ or his ‘incarnation’. The
  anti-idolatrous battle verse: ‘He was not engendered and has not engendered’
  (Qur’ān 122:3), while affirming the
  Creator’s uncreatedness, rejects both the Pagan conception of Allāh’s ‘daughters’
  and the Christian conception of Allāh’s ‘only-begotten son’. During the
  Crusades, when the Pagans of Arabia had long disappeared, it was used as a
  war motto against the Christians. 
In Islam, this širk/’association’
  of a mortal with a star, or of an image with the real deity, or of a creature
  with the Creator, became the single worst sin: idolatry. 
This didn't prevent the Islamic world from developing its own very
  successful form of stargazing. Astrology remained popular among the Arabs,
  both the native 28 manāzil (Lunar Houses), and the newly introduced
  Babylonian-Hellenistic horoscopy. Like Judaism and Christianity, Islam
  restricted the regard one could have for the stars, but at the same time it
  provided a way out for astrologers. Allotting a predictive meaning to stars
  could be accepted on condition that it did not involve any deification. As
  long as the stars were seen as mere instruments of God’s dispensing of destiny
  (taqdīr) to the creatures, it was
  lawful to decipher them in horoscopes. 
Conclusion 
At the dawn of history, and practically since the birth of mankind,
  star worship, partly overlapping with ancestor worship, was the main religion
  worldwide. With the development of civilization, and with the breakthrough of
  monotheism, conceptions of the divine grew away from their referents in
  nature. Star worship remained alive, but that old layer was overlaid with new
  levels of abstraction. 
In the Greco-Roman world, the elites outgrew the colourful pantheon
  and, mainly through Stoicism, accepted a more abstract and more unitary
  concept of the divine. In Neoplatonism, which may have been influenced by
  Indian thought centring around the Absolute (brahman), everything was thought to emanate from ‘the One’ (to
  hen). In China too, ‘the One’, ‘the big oneness’ (tàiyī 太一) was the name of a unifying abstract
  concept transcending the many natural gods of everyday religion.   
In the late Roman empire, this natural evolution was interrupted and
  driven in a particular direction by the imposition of Christianity. The same
  scenario repeated itself even more abruptly with the advent of Islam,
  resulting in the generalized belief in tawḥīd,
  ‘oneness’ or monotheism. Allāh is
  conceived as the totally Other: he has no link with stars, men or any other
  beings. He has no worthy likeness; any image, even heaven, would do Him
  injustice. 
In fact, however, it would have been perfectly possible to move from a
  naturalistic to a more abstract conception of the divine without cultural
  disruption, without destroying earlier conceptions, as Christianity and Islam
  did. But either way, the practical impact on our topic is that širk in explicit form is now more or
  less dead.    |