Types of theism in a fantasy setting
Posted: Sat Jul 17, 2010 1:01 am
Ok, I'm going to try and get people on the same page as to what kinds of theism would likely exist in a fantasy setting, and explain conditions necessary for some that require specific conditions.
I don't claim all of these exist in meatspace, but most probably do, in one way or another, though possibly in very low percentages.
EDIT: I need to put some more info into some of the theisms here. Mostly it'll probably refer to the second post of theisms.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pantheism
According to Wiki, this isn't what I always understood it to mean (pagan pantheon constructs, etc.) but rather the belief that "the universe/nature and god are one" or that the only thing deserving of worship is the Universe.
Supposedly derived from the greek 'pan' (all) and 'theos' used as a general term for belief or worship, so it is supposed to literally mean "belief/worship of all". Technically that's not parsed correctly, but, whatever.
I actually know people like this in real life, and some people think this is what atheists believe (pro tip, it's not.) A pantheist is someone who believes that the world or universe is a quasi-sentient entity capable of action, whether directly or indirectly. As far as beliefs go... eh, it works, I suppose.
A pantheistic cleric would worship "the universe" and get power from it. Technically this would manifest as being able to pick probably just about any domain, possibly aside from ethical/moral ones, ie: alignment domains.
Pantheists in a fantasy world would probably see the followers of other faiths as deluded ("Pelor is just an aspect of the universe!") or flat out wrong ("There is no Pelor! You should worship the universe!"). Alternatively you could get some hippie pantheists that are cool with what ever you believe because "the universe is all, so if you worship something, you're worshiping the universe, just in another guise." Again, there are totally people that are like that, and they can either be really frustrating, or pretty cool.
Pantheism has a variation, Panentheism.
Panentheism is the belief that in addition to the cosmos being inherently awesome, there is a god or gods attached to it which are superior to the material universe. It's like Soft Poly-Pantheism.
Animism
Animism is the belief that everything has a spirit, and that all spirits are, more or less, equally worthy of respect, whether that respect is born of fear or love.
This can get really weird if you analyze it too much. I mean, sure, the Himalayas have a spirit, and you could conceivably say each individual rock and pebble, and patch of grass and so on have their own spirits. But take it further. Everything has a spirit. The slurpee I'm drinking has a spirit. Possibly the individual water molecules in it have their own spirits. The coaster I just tapped it on has a spirit (did it mind being struck with a slurpee cup? Does it get along with the spirits of the slurpee, the slurpee's cup, and my desk?). The computer I'm typing on has at least one spirit (does it mind what I use it for? Is my computer's spirit a prude?). Now, take it even further. You have a spirit. But your body could be seen as a separate concept from you, does your body have a spirit of it's own? What happens to the spirit(s) of the cheeseburger you just ate? Do they become shit spirits?
I'm really not sure how actual animists deal with these concepts. I'm nominally an animist, but an agnostic one, and I just largely don't worry about them, probably as an instinctual defense mechanism against the paranoia and over-concern that would develop if I cognitively believed that my chair and bed have spirits that might be watching me.
An animist cleric probably "represents" a specific spirit. But this spirit could be anything from Amaterasu, the sun spirit, to the spirit of their childhood dog, to the spirit of the big boulder their hometown was built around. Or hell, it's possible that even concepts have spirits. So you could represent a spirit of theft. Or hell, Animism is, itself, a concept. If concepts have a spirit, then there is literally a spirit of animism that a cleric could represent. I have no clue what domains they would be able to pick.
In practice, in a game, this can lead to really cool territory (a fighter awakening the spirit of his sword and armour to enchant them, or the spirit of a sword actually being a playable character, walking around in it's dead owner's armour, wielding it's physical self.) and it can lead to really weird territory (the idiot player that you sometimes question your friendship with wanting to be a cleric of the spirit of shit).
As far as attitudes between the animist and the other theists, it's really going to depend on the character, but it could be anything from the vaguely passive aggressive jab ("You know, Pelor is really just a different name for Amaterasu... Oh, and she doesn't have a beard. And she wears a dress.") to live and let live stuff like the pantheist, to crusading for people to realize everything has a spirit ("Did you perform the proper rituals when you killed that deer so it's spirit doesn't become a horrible brain eating monster that comes to kill us all for disrespecting it?" "...no..." "You've doomed us all.")
Polytheism
Polytheism is the belief that there are a lot of gods and you need to be aware of all of them. Yes, all of them. Even Priapus. Not only that, but you need to appease a lot of them on various occasions, and that you can appeal to different ones for different stuff. (Priapus was seriously employed as a magic lawn gnome protection against theft with the threat of buggery.) Granted, in a polytheistic society, you rarely get priests of "all the gods." There's usually some specialization (gotta love priestesses of Aphrodite. Especially if you're a soldier of Ares.), but there's also often a chief god of some description and a priest of, say, Zeus, may well have some knowledge of and power with the other gods of the Pantheon.
Yes, Pantheon. This is where things can get confusing. Pantheon is the term for a group of related deities. So you've got the Greek Pantheon, the Roman Pantheon, The Egyptian Pantheon, etc. This is really simplifying things, but it works for our purposes. In reality who's in and who's out of a Pantheon depends by region, time, town, etc. So in D&D a group of elves that know nothing about the drow probably aren't going to recognize Lolth. A group of drow who have never had a CG member, or who kill all CG drow probably don't know about Elistree, or they consider her a perversion or heresy.
A cleric of a Pantheon is probably going to directly represent a specific god, so yes, you'll have clerics of Pelor. But they're actually clerics in the larger "Human Pantheon" or something. They represent Pelor, but also the entire pantheon of their region and race. Or worse, they represent the custom pantheon that grew within a multi-cultural area (so the PHB pantheon).
I'm really not sure what the attitude of a pantheon cleric would be towards theists of other pantheons or theologies. They could get along, or they could be at each others' throats.
Inside of Polytheism, there are some subtypes.
These include:
Henotheism and Monolatrism (see below)
Kathenotheism the belief that there are many gods, but only one is ever worshiped at a time, possibly at specific times.
There's also Hard Polytheism and Soft Polytheism.
Hard Polytheism is the belief that the different gods are distinct entities, like in the Greek model. Soft Polytheism is the belief that the distinct gods are subsumed into a greater whole, like in Hinduism (or some forms of it, I guess), or possibly even some forms of Buddhism, depending on one's view of Nirvana, I guess.
-------------------------------------------------------------
I'll add more a bit later but those are some basic ones. What I'll add later gets a bit crazier.
I don't claim all of these exist in meatspace, but most probably do, in one way or another, though possibly in very low percentages.
EDIT: I need to put some more info into some of the theisms here. Mostly it'll probably refer to the second post of theisms.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pantheism
According to Wiki, this isn't what I always understood it to mean (pagan pantheon constructs, etc.) but rather the belief that "the universe/nature and god are one" or that the only thing deserving of worship is the Universe.
Supposedly derived from the greek 'pan' (all) and 'theos' used as a general term for belief or worship, so it is supposed to literally mean "belief/worship of all". Technically that's not parsed correctly, but, whatever.
I actually know people like this in real life, and some people think this is what atheists believe (pro tip, it's not.) A pantheist is someone who believes that the world or universe is a quasi-sentient entity capable of action, whether directly or indirectly. As far as beliefs go... eh, it works, I suppose.
A pantheistic cleric would worship "the universe" and get power from it. Technically this would manifest as being able to pick probably just about any domain, possibly aside from ethical/moral ones, ie: alignment domains.
Pantheists in a fantasy world would probably see the followers of other faiths as deluded ("Pelor is just an aspect of the universe!") or flat out wrong ("There is no Pelor! You should worship the universe!"). Alternatively you could get some hippie pantheists that are cool with what ever you believe because "the universe is all, so if you worship something, you're worshiping the universe, just in another guise." Again, there are totally people that are like that, and they can either be really frustrating, or pretty cool.
Pantheism has a variation, Panentheism.
Panentheism is the belief that in addition to the cosmos being inherently awesome, there is a god or gods attached to it which are superior to the material universe. It's like Soft Poly-Pantheism.
Animism
Animism is the belief that everything has a spirit, and that all spirits are, more or less, equally worthy of respect, whether that respect is born of fear or love.
This can get really weird if you analyze it too much. I mean, sure, the Himalayas have a spirit, and you could conceivably say each individual rock and pebble, and patch of grass and so on have their own spirits. But take it further. Everything has a spirit. The slurpee I'm drinking has a spirit. Possibly the individual water molecules in it have their own spirits. The coaster I just tapped it on has a spirit (did it mind being struck with a slurpee cup? Does it get along with the spirits of the slurpee, the slurpee's cup, and my desk?). The computer I'm typing on has at least one spirit (does it mind what I use it for? Is my computer's spirit a prude?). Now, take it even further. You have a spirit. But your body could be seen as a separate concept from you, does your body have a spirit of it's own? What happens to the spirit(s) of the cheeseburger you just ate? Do they become shit spirits?
I'm really not sure how actual animists deal with these concepts. I'm nominally an animist, but an agnostic one, and I just largely don't worry about them, probably as an instinctual defense mechanism against the paranoia and over-concern that would develop if I cognitively believed that my chair and bed have spirits that might be watching me.
An animist cleric probably "represents" a specific spirit. But this spirit could be anything from Amaterasu, the sun spirit, to the spirit of their childhood dog, to the spirit of the big boulder their hometown was built around. Or hell, it's possible that even concepts have spirits. So you could represent a spirit of theft. Or hell, Animism is, itself, a concept. If concepts have a spirit, then there is literally a spirit of animism that a cleric could represent. I have no clue what domains they would be able to pick.
In practice, in a game, this can lead to really cool territory (a fighter awakening the spirit of his sword and armour to enchant them, or the spirit of a sword actually being a playable character, walking around in it's dead owner's armour, wielding it's physical self.) and it can lead to really weird territory (the idiot player that you sometimes question your friendship with wanting to be a cleric of the spirit of shit).
As far as attitudes between the animist and the other theists, it's really going to depend on the character, but it could be anything from the vaguely passive aggressive jab ("You know, Pelor is really just a different name for Amaterasu... Oh, and she doesn't have a beard. And she wears a dress.") to live and let live stuff like the pantheist, to crusading for people to realize everything has a spirit ("Did you perform the proper rituals when you killed that deer so it's spirit doesn't become a horrible brain eating monster that comes to kill us all for disrespecting it?" "...no..." "You've doomed us all.")
Polytheism
Polytheism is the belief that there are a lot of gods and you need to be aware of all of them. Yes, all of them. Even Priapus. Not only that, but you need to appease a lot of them on various occasions, and that you can appeal to different ones for different stuff. (Priapus was seriously employed as a magic lawn gnome protection against theft with the threat of buggery.) Granted, in a polytheistic society, you rarely get priests of "all the gods." There's usually some specialization (gotta love priestesses of Aphrodite. Especially if you're a soldier of Ares.), but there's also often a chief god of some description and a priest of, say, Zeus, may well have some knowledge of and power with the other gods of the Pantheon.
Yes, Pantheon. This is where things can get confusing. Pantheon is the term for a group of related deities. So you've got the Greek Pantheon, the Roman Pantheon, The Egyptian Pantheon, etc. This is really simplifying things, but it works for our purposes. In reality who's in and who's out of a Pantheon depends by region, time, town, etc. So in D&D a group of elves that know nothing about the drow probably aren't going to recognize Lolth. A group of drow who have never had a CG member, or who kill all CG drow probably don't know about Elistree, or they consider her a perversion or heresy.
A cleric of a Pantheon is probably going to directly represent a specific god, so yes, you'll have clerics of Pelor. But they're actually clerics in the larger "Human Pantheon" or something. They represent Pelor, but also the entire pantheon of their region and race. Or worse, they represent the custom pantheon that grew within a multi-cultural area (so the PHB pantheon).
I'm really not sure what the attitude of a pantheon cleric would be towards theists of other pantheons or theologies. They could get along, or they could be at each others' throats.
Inside of Polytheism, there are some subtypes.
These include:
Henotheism and Monolatrism (see below)
Kathenotheism the belief that there are many gods, but only one is ever worshiped at a time, possibly at specific times.
There's also Hard Polytheism and Soft Polytheism.
Hard Polytheism is the belief that the different gods are distinct entities, like in the Greek model. Soft Polytheism is the belief that the distinct gods are subsumed into a greater whole, like in Hinduism (or some forms of it, I guess), or possibly even some forms of Buddhism, depending on one's view of Nirvana, I guess.
-------------------------------------------------------------
I'll add more a bit later but those are some basic ones. What I'll add later gets a bit crazier.