Religion

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Religion, as it is in Trinity.

History of Religion

In the beginning of the world, there were no individual deities, nor servants of them; there was only the Divine itself, to which the universe - that is, Nature itself - sealed off into what is known as the Metaphysic.

Over time, the Divine gradually worked itself into the fabric of reality, able to exert its will upon the happenings therein, albeit slowly and indirectly. The first and foremost of these channels were what are known as the True Gods - beings that were directly tied to the Divine itself, channeling the power of the Divine in an overwhelming manner.

The True Gods, however, were not limitless in power, and - in order to hide their activites from the gaze of Nature - so created minions to do their bidding throughout the world. These are collectively known as the Scions, children of the True Gods, and they came in two forms: Saints and Lucavi, terms that are recognized even today. Unable to directly gift their creations with the power of the Divine, the True Gods forged a bridge between their essences and the Metaphysic: only through faith, and faith alone, could these beings attain a semblance of the Divine power wielded by the True Gods.

However, reality did eventually turn its eye to the machinations of the Divine and its direct servitors. In the Fourth Age of the Second Epoch, known simply as The Fracture, a massive cataclysm arose that resulted in the utter and irreversible destruction of the True Gods. Only their "children," the Scions, were spared.

Unlike their masters, the Saints and the Lucavi were not disrupted by this event; however, their power was directly tied to worship. Seeking a means to prevent the power of the Divine from waning utterly from reality, they took the ashes, shards, and splinters of the True Gods, and fashioned each fraction into a being unto itself: thus were born Angels and Daemons. These creatures retained a semblance of the power wielded by the True Gods, but it was fractional and incomplete; in the deaths of the True Gods, the sentience and free-will of the Gods had been lost. However, with these servants, the Saints and Lucavi could retain some amount of Divine power in the face of waning faith.

The Divine and Atheism

Atheism in Trinity is not quite the same as it is in the real world. Divine miracles are not an uncommon occurrence, and there is a wide range of empirical evidence that suggests that the Divine can and does have a real effect on the world.

In such a world, one can reasonably ask the question: how do atheists exist? To this question, the Trinity atheist points out that there is a world of difference between acknowledging something's existence, and deciding to believe in it. It is one thing to say that a man is a Saint; it is entirely another to put one's faith in that Saint, and to worship such a being. Trinity atheists no more deny that the Divine exists than they deny that gravity is real; they choose, however, to not put their faith in such things, relying instead upon themselves and their own abilities.

Divine Beings: The True Gods

It is not known how many True Gods there were; even if it were, their names and natures have been lost to the ages. The lore and ecclesiastical texts regarding the origins of some of the more powerful remaining Divine beings make vague references to these beings, but only in one - the origin of the Lucavi Ajora - is a name directly given, that of the True Goddess Kolaita.

Unlike the Scions, whose power waxes and wanes with the strength of faith placed in them, for whom it is possible to lose and re-attain Divine status, a True God's power is not dependent upon faith; their existence is a fact, made possible by metaphysical links forged between reality and the Divine. If this link is severed, the True God dies - and once such a link is severed, it cannot be reforged. In the event known as the Fracture, the links between the Metaphysic and all of the True Gods were cut; no amount of faith and no mortal attempt can bring these beings back from the dead. While it is possible for new Divine beings of other sorts to come to the fore, and old ones who had long been forgotten to suddenly return, the True Gods are truly gone.

It is known, however, that the power the True Gods held is present in the form of the still-existing Divine beings of the world: the Scions were direct creations of the True Gods, and even those newer Scions can still draw their metaphysical lineage directly to the True Gods; the Shards are creatures crafted by the Scions out of the fragments of the True Gods that still held a hint of the Divine spark; and the Servants are beings crafted by the Scions out of the leftover physical remains of the True Gods, imbued with the souls of departed mortals.

True Gods

  • Kolaita
  • Tethys

Divine Beings: The Scions

The Scions were the direct servants of the True Gods, in the time before the Fracture. After that time, they exist as the highest source of Divine power in the world, and it is from them that paladins, priests, and their ilk draw power.

When the True Gods shaped the Scions, they created two distinct groups - the Saints, and the Lucavi. The Saints were mortals, drawn from their ranks because they received great praise from their peoples, which the True Gods saw as a form of worship. The Lucavi were crafted to seek out power by offering things in exchange for worship, such as goods or favors. In this manner, the True Gods believed that the Divine presence in reality would not die out, as at least one of the two sets of Scions would prevail in the face of adversity.

Scions require faith to continue their Divine existence; without it, a Saint or Lucavi reverts to its natural form. Even so much as a single person with true faith in an individual Scion is sufficient to grant the being Divine power, thanks to the bridge formed between that individual and the Metaphysic itself.

In the absence of the True Gods, the two groups of Scions eventually set to feuding with one another; while the presence of the True Gods managed to give them a shared sense of purpose, the collapse of an overarching Divine hierarchy has left them to their own devices, and no longer do the two groups work at least in tandem. Since the Fracture, the two groups have vied nearly constantly, though their very natures prevent either group from winning entirely.

The Saints

Throughout the whole of history, there have been individuals who rose above their peers, performing deeds thought impossible or performed against overwhelming odds. The "hero worship" these people were given, especially after their deaths, paved the way for the True Gods' creation of one of the two groups of Scions - the Saints.

Unlike their peers, the Lucavi, the Saints are not simply made; instead, Saints are drawn up from the ranks of mortals, their peoples' belief and faith in them rising to the level of true faith, in a Divine sense. When a soul attains its first true believer, the soul rises from the rank and file of the afterlife and becomes a Saint, their essence becoming metaphysically linked to the Metaphysic itself. So long as the Saint has at least one true believer, that link cannot be severed, and the Saint can utilize the power of the Divine.

Worship of Saints is protected almost everywhere, regardless of which Saint is worshipped; this is primarily due to the belief that Saints are or were people deserving of such trust, and that even an evil Saint must have some redeeming qualities if there are those who choose to believe in them.

Saints

  • Tracy Vannieu, of the Gun
  • Konoe Ishikaru, of the Blade
  • Arcostes Germonik, of the Book
  • Samahtar, of the Mind
  • Saiwin Aiwe, of the Wind
  • Luna Lorne, of the Night
  • Sardon, of the Lightning
  • Fortang Diaclo, of the Forge
  • Calixte, of the Muse
  • Jareth Larin, of the Labyrinth
  • Rashida, of the Moons
  • Uriah Morodov, of the Road

The Lucavi

Not all mortals freely give their faith; some require a trade, knowing full well what their faith does for those that ask for it. Thus, when the True Gods shaped the Scions, they made the Lucavi, a small caste of demons gifted with Divine power to grant gifts to mortals in exchange for their faith. If someone does not believe of their own free will, the True Gods reasoned, then perhaps something in return will secure their faith.

Unlike the Saints, whose origins are in the mortal races, the Lucavi were crafted by the True Gods, then instructed to acquire followers. True faith is integral to their material cohesion; while the base faith necessary to maintain their existence was originally provided by the True Gods (an awkward inversion of the standard understanding of faith), the Lucavi have since lost this safety net. As such, they are constantly seeking out new followers amongst the mortal races: behind every Faustian deal is the desperation of a being seeking to maintain its own existence.

In the beginning, the Lucavi were not all necessarily evil creatures, but the death of the True Gods combined with their nature of accruing power, they rapidly became "evil" in the classic sense. The discovery that mortals who commanded the worship of those around them could rise to Scionhood showed the Lucavi that they could rival the Saints in terms of raw Divine power at their disposal, and thus they have continued to thrive and prosper, even though no new "true" Lucavi can be made.

Lucavi

Divine Beings: The Shards

The channels the Divine itself cut through the chasm to bridge the gulf between the Metaphysic and reality were deep, and though they were torn asunder in the event known as the Fracture, causing the death of the True Gods in the process, not all of the Divine power was lost.

The Scions looked upon the scattered remains of their patrons, and saw the glimmer of Divine power left strewn amongst the ashes; though the power the True Gods tapped into could never be reassembled, a crude facsimile of their existences could perhaps be constructed from their remains. Thus the Scions - Saint and Lucavi alike - set about to breathing life into the ashes, shards, and fragments that remained of their former masters: and so were the Angels and Daemons of the world born.

Unlike the Scions, those who are known collectively as the Shards do not rely upon faith for their continued existence nor access to their power: they call upon the same channels the Divine hewed and gave birth to the True Gods from. However, these channels were torn asunder in the Fracture, and are only a mere shadow of what they once were; not only that, but each Shard contains but a mere fragment of what was once a True God. While it is enough to provide these creatures with a firm existence in reality, as well as the power to call upon the Divine itself, they are little more than automatons; an Angel or Daemon has little in the way of free will. Instead, a Shard always seeks to serve a Scion: their relationship mimics, in many ways, the relationship between the True Gods and the Divine itself. A Shard without a Scion master is a rare thing indeed, and rarer yet is the Shard that operates of its own accord.

Shards are impressionable beings, and having little in the ways of a concept of self, they often take on the aspects of the Scion that commands them that best reflect the deific fragment that forms their core. Shards are not copies of the True Gods from which they sprang, nor the Scions that they serve - they are somewhat a combination of both, aspects of the two personalities they draw from magnifying each other, resulting in usually rather extreme personalities.

Shards, much like the True Gods, are capable of true belief in a Scion; as such, Lucavi crave their service, as a legion of Shards can suffice to fulfill the role of existential safety net that the True Gods once played. Saints appreciate the presence of the faith of Shards, as such faith can see the Saint through in times when mortal belief dwindles.

Angels

Daemons

Divine Beings: The Servants

When the remaining sparks of the Divine were swept from the ashes of the True Gods, and all that remained were husks devoid of any Divine connection, the Scions yet saw opportunity: though physical, even the pieces of the True Gods that lacked any hint of Divine spark were made of far sterner stuff than anything on the mortal coil.

The Scions shaped this refuse into crude shells. Tapping into the realms of the afterlife, the Scions imbued these lifeless husks with the souls of the departed, creating for themselves not life, but something close to it. It was all the Scions could do to use their Divine power to imbue semi-life into these creatures; though they possessed souls, they were not alive in a mortal sense, and they rarely retained memory of their mortal lives. To make matters worse, the remnants of the True Gods the Scions had had left to work with were utterly cut off from the Divine - even to the point of making their faith, or lack thereof, have any impact upon the continued existence of the Scions themselves.

Despite these shortcomings, the Scions felt that these beings could be useful tools. With continued growth and experience, it was possible for the Servants to eventually gain experiences and memories that belonged to the fusion of mortal soul and Divine body, gradually improving the creatures' connections to the Divine - and in some cases, to the point where a Scion could "upgrade" the new being to something resembling a Shard in power and purpose, if not in origin.

Celestials

Fiends

Old Stuff

Religions are not a well-explored aspect of the world. While religions are present, they tend to take a backseat to the ever-present enmity between the forces of the Trinity of Reality.