The story so far: Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the historic Prambanan Temple near Yogyakarta, Indonesia. Standing alongside Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto, he offered prayers at the 9th-century UNESCO World Heritage Site, the largest Hindu temple complex in the country, which houses the trimurti of Vedic Hinduism — Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva.
The temple signifies the assertion of Hinduism as a monotheistic religion to meet the legal standard in the country for official recognition, which it secured in 1962, after a period of turmoil and uncertainty following the country’s independence in 1945. The trimurti is presented as the manifestation of one supreme god. Incidentally, the Christian concept of the trinity is also premised on one supreme god. The temple combines the antiquity of the faith and traditions with the modern, innovative repurposing of the inherent polytheism of Hinduism as monotheistic.
In Indonesia’s legal system, two concepts are in tension — mandatory monotheism and the guarantee of religious freedom. The country’s national identity itself is deeply tied to adherence to religion. The country has a national identity card with a mandatory column on religion, which is of considerable consequence for civic life. Marriage registration, birth certificates, school religious education tracking, civil service promotion, and even burial rights are tied to a person’s declared religion. To date, Indonesia does not recognise agnosticism or atheism, and blasphemy remains illegal. Indonesia also guarantees religious freedom. To reconcile this, the state recognised six religions — Islam, Protestantism, Catholicism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Confucianism — as agama, formalised in 1965.
The founding principle of the modern Indonesian state has five components (Pancasila), and the first is monotheism, or faith in one supreme god. When this was mandated as state policy, Islam, Catholicism and Protestantism were considered legitimate by default. Hinduism could not meet the three criteria set in 1952 for a community to be recognised as a religion — it had to be strictly monotheistic, possess a recognised holy scripture, and be founded by a prophet.
The application for Hindu recognition was formally turned down by the Indonesian Ministry of Religion in 1952. Reformers organised under the banner of the Parisada Hindu Dharma (later Parisada Hindu Dharma Indonesia, PHDI), founded in Bali in 1959, and reframed Balinese practice around a single supreme deity, Sang Hyang Widhi Wasa, recasting a richly polytheistic tradition into something that could satisfy the monotheistic test. PHDI is the body that holds this together — the principal representative body for Hindus in Indonesia, defining theology, issuing religious guidance, and standardising ritual practice for the whole category.
To satisfy the state’s monotheism requirement, Balinese reformers took the Hindu monistic concept of Brahman (the impersonal ultimate reality) and personified it as a single supreme god-concept, Sang Hyang Widhi Wasa — sometimes equated with the Trimurti (Brahma-Vishnu-Shiva) fused into one, sometimes identified with the abstract Acintya (”the inconceivable”). The concept evolved across three distinct phases to become Indonesia’s definitive monotheistic deity. It began with ancient Austronesian and Sanskrit roots, where “Sang Hyang” signified divine forces and “Widhi” cosmic law, represented conceptually as the formless Acintya. In the 1930s, Protestant missionaries coined the term “Sang Hyang Widhi Wasa” to translate “God Almighty” for Christian use; Hindu reformers later adopted it to mirror the non-dualistic Brahman. Finally, during the 1950s political crisis, Hindu scholars formally articulated this entity as a single Supreme Godhead, aligning Hinduism with Indonesia’s monotheistic legal mandate. Hinduism secured official state recognition in 1962.
Essentialisation, standardisation and documentation are outcomes and drivers of identities, religious and national across places and time. This entire process looks more dramatic in Indonesia mainly because it was compressed, recent, and administratively engineered in full view, while the broader evolution of Hinduism follows this same pattern over centuries and millennia elsewhere. Indonesian Hinduism is hence revelatory.
As it exists today in the country, it is an adaptation of the faith to modern legal architecture. Islam and Christianity arrived with pre-existing global institutional scaffolding – scriptures, clergy hierarchies, and centuries-old doctrines. Hinduism in Indonesia had to build its scaffolding specifically to satisfy state monotheism rules and qualify as one of the recognised agamas. But internally it is closer to a federation of distinct traditions unified under a shared nomenclature. In Indonesia there is a bureaucracy associated with it, but otherwise this follows the pattern of how Hinduism evolved in India as well.
Once Hinduism secured official recognition, it became something other indigenous groups could deliberately import wholesale as a legal shelter. The linkage between Hinduism and Indonesia’s indigenous groups is a shared abstract supreme-being concept plus a shared certifying institution (PHDI), laid over communities whose actual ritual life — deities, ancestor practice, and funerary rites — remain substantially indigenous and pre-Hindu in origin.
Three common features continue from the older traditions, which recognised religions including Catholicism, Protestantism and Hinduism, shared in Indonesia — ancestral worship, animal sacrifice and nature worship. Islam and Christianity too are diverse and pluralistic in Indonesia, though their plurality accumulated over four to five centuries and is now often perceived as organic cultural depth.
Separation of religion and state is so often mentioned as a feature of modernity that the mutual interaction between the two is often ignored. In reality, religion and state shape each other. Hinduism, Christianity and Islam have all been shaped by state policy around the world, in modern and premodern periods alike. All three monotheistic religions continue to carry traces of these practices to date in Indonesia. All this is far from a settled debate. There are tensions among Christian and Islamic sects obsessed with purifying the practice of local accretions, but the broader scaffolding of religion continues to be in place.
Published - July 10, 2026 07:57 am IST