Hermes Trismegistus |
In real-world mythology and religion, it doesn't work like that. Zeus was, and was not, exactly Jupiter. Ra was Ra, unless he was Amun-Ra or Aten. Dumuzid was Tammuz, except for the times he was his own father. This is not counting the times when religions rise, fall, change and morph over the centuries. Today's God is tomorrow's demon. Ask Astarte or the Tuatha Dé Danann how things fare for them now.
Gods are messy.
It stands to reason that gods in your games should also be as messy.
Now, most games do not have the centuries (game time) and none have the real-time evolution of gods in their games. We use simple "spheres" and give the gods roles that they rarely deviate from. The Forgotten Realms is an exception since its published works cover a couple hundred years of in-universe time, but even then their gods are often pretty stable. That is to make them easier to approach and to make sales of books easier. The Dragonlance books cover more time in the game world, but their gods are another issue entirely.
While I want to get back to my One Man's God in the proper sense I do want to take this side quest to talk about Syncretism.
Syncretism
According to the ole' Wikipedia, "Syncretism /ˈsɪŋkrətɪzəm/ is the combining of different beliefs, while blending practices of various schools of thought." For our purposes today we are going to confine ourselves to just gods.
For game purposes, I am going to use Syncretism as the combination of two or more gods into one. The individual gods and the syncretized god are considered to be different and separate entities.
Now years ago when I proposed the idea that gods can be different than what is stated I go some grief online from people claiming that gods are absolute truth. For example, you can cast a Commune spell and speak to a god and get an answer. But a commune is not a cell phone. It is not email. It is only slightly better than an Ouija board. You have no idea who, or what, is on the other end. If you are a cleric all you have is faith.
So what is a syncretic god like? Some examples from the real world and my own games.
Hermes Trismegistus
Our poster boy for syncretism is good old Hermes Trismegistus or the Thrice Great Hermes. He is a Hellenistic syncretism of the Greek Hermes and the Egyptian Thoth. Now, the DDG has these as very separate individuals. Thoth is a Neutral Greater God of Knowledge, Hermes is a Neutral Greater God of Thieves, Liars, and more. From this perspective, there does not seem to be an overlap. But like I say above, gods are messy. This figure is believed to have written the Corpus Hermetica, the collection of knowledge passed down to the various Hermetic Orders that would appear in later antiquity and during the Occult revivals. Even then the Thrice Great Hermes of the Hellenistic period could be argued to be a completely different personage than the Thrice Great Hermes of the Hermetic Orders.
But is Hermes Trismegistus a God? If you met him on the street would that mean you also met Hermes, Thoth, and Mercury? Or can all four walk into a bar together and order a drink? That answer of course is a confounding yes to all the above. Though this is less satisfactory than say having stats for all four in a book.
The Triple Moon Goddess Heresy
Back when I was starting up my 4e game and deciding to set it in the Forgotten Realms I wanted to make sure I had a good grasp on the gods and goddesses of the world. I was also already mulling some thoughts that would become One Man's God, so I decided to go full heretic. I combined the moon goddesses all into one Goddess. I also decided that like Krynn, Toril has three moons, but you can't see one of them. I detailed that religion in my post Nothing Like the Sun... and I did something similar to Lolth and Araushnee in The Church of Lolth Ascendant.
Sehanine Moonbow, Selûne, and Shar by Ben Honeycutt |
As expected (and maybe a little wanted) these tended to shuffle the feathers of the orthodoxy. Thanks for that by the way.
This is all fun and everything, but what can I actually *do* with these?
Syncretic Gods make FANTASTIC witch and warlock patrons.
Witches in many pagan traditions in the real world believe that their Goddess is all goddesses. That is syncretism to the Nth degree. I already have a case with Hermes Trismegistus and the Hermetic Order.
Here are some syncretic gods from antiquity and potential roles as patrons.
Apollo-Belenus, Patron of the sun and healing. From the Greco-Roman Apollo and the Gaulish Belenus.
Ashtart, Patroness of love, marriage, and sex. Combines the Goddesses Aphrodite, Astarte, Athirat, Ishtar, Isis, and Venus. Sometimes depicted as the consort to Serapis.
Cybele, or the Magna Mater, Patroness of Motherhood and fertility. She combines many Earth and motherhood-related Goddesses such as Gaia, Rhea, and Demeter.
Serapis, the Patron of Law, Order, rulers, and the afterlife. He is a combination of the Gods Osiris and Apis from Egypt with Hades and Dionysus of the Greek. Besides Hermes Trismegistus, he is one of the most popular syncretic gods and the one that lead archeologists and researchers to the idea of syncretism.
Sulis Minerva, Patroness of the sun and the life-giving power of the earth. She is chaste and virginal where Ashtart is lascivious.
And one I made up to add to this mix and smooth out some edges,
Heka, the Patroness of Magic. She combines Hecate, Cardea, (who might have been the same anyway), Isis, with bits of Ishtar (who has connections to Isis too), and Ereshkigal with some Persephone.
In my own games, I have always wanted to explore the Mystra (Goddess) and Mystara (World) connection.
This also helps me answer an old question. Why would a Lawful Good witch be feared or hated? Simple that Lawful witch is worshiping a god that the orthodoxy deems as a heresy.
A Witch (or Warlock) of the Tripple Moon Goddess in the Realms is going to be hated by both the followers of Selûne and Shar, even if they are the same alignment. Cults are like that.
I am planning on expanding these ideas further.
Another thing I want to explore is when a god is split into two or more gods or demons. In this case I want to have some sort of divinity that was "killed" and from the remnants of that god became Orcus and Dis Pater, or something like that. Orcus, Dis Pater (Dispater), and Hades have a long and odd relationship. This is not counting other gods that have floated in and out of Orcus' orbit like Aita and Soranus.
1 comment:
Just seeing this from a recent link. Love it. Now to catch up on your exploration...
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