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In a thing I'm writing, the plot revolves around 'shards' fragments of a divine power that attach themselves to a rare few humans at birth- one in some many million. When that human hits a massive stress point, the shard and their body fuse together to transform them into a God/dess, able to discorporate at will. The new diety's purviews are the most important things in their life at that time- for example hurricane Katrina triggered the birth of both a storm goddess and a disease god. The gods have massive power in their field- that storm goddess could swamp north america for days, the disease god could wipe out europe in a few weeks. Given that, my questions are:
- There is an equal spread between males and females who receive shards- how would that have impacted gender dynamics how and historically and what would medieval europeans have thought of war/destruction goddesses?
- How would Abrahamic religions explain this? What happens if a pope or priest ascends- especially if they become a god of sex or corruption etc.?
- Can you regulate beings of such power legally? What kind of laws would be needed to validate a new god's cult, or to stop divine wars?
Currently, about 200 gods exist, the 'old' gods- about 150 or so- only intervene at the behest of legally sanctioned high priests and otherwise just stay in 'heaven' or the underworld- humans get boring after a while and they find physical forms limiting. Younger ones tend to try and help the causes they supported in mortality. Human worship is equivalent to fancy foods- good to show off, makes them feel good- but not necessary. Pantheons are merely political alliances.
They are worshipped, but 'pantheons' are just political alliances and can fall through. People know that it's possible to ascend, but knowledge of shards is a university level thing. – Titanide – 2015-05-17T14:34:56.773
What can be done to influence these new "Gods?" Nothing is mentioned of their strength or weakness after fusion, so its hard to say how we would treat them. Also, is there a particular reason you believe the Abrahamic religions would form as is? Are to treat them as the "true religions," or perhaps they were just isolated enough to not experience a transformation until after the religion was written down? It is unlikely that a religion built around a book that contains everything true that matters would fail to have a few phrases on the topic. Are you wondering what those phrases might be? – Cort Ammon – 2015-05-17T19:26:09.417
I would like to know what the phrases are, thanks for clarifying. I'm trying to veer away from 'true' religions, but as those three are the most prominent in the locale I wanted to know more about them. Given the answer from Murphy, it wouldn't be that unlikely for christians to go for a century or two before an Ascension occurred amongst them. I don't really see them as having many weaknesses though- god's are usually unbeatable. – Titanide – 2015-05-17T19:36:20.153