I enjoyed the OP for this thread, and reading the discussion of religion and the various analogues. However, I believe the onus is on the GM to make every aspect of religion as dark as it is idealistic. That is, if his players fail to do so for him. Sure, the Bloodless Xristos is all about a utopian vision, but so are many real-world religions. There's nothing to say that
The Bloodless Xristos won't remain a fringe religion, nor that if it gathers enough momentum that it can't become painful and controlling.
The game currently contains:
a) a (cool, funhouse-mirror, reimagined) fictional analog of pre-Nicene-council Christianity
b) a (cool, funhouse-mirror, reimagined) fictional analog of Teutonic/Celtic paganism
c) a (cool, funhouse-mirror, reimagined) fictional analog of Roman civic religion.
Why? Why not just represent different aspects/stages of religion?
The Old GodsAre at first glance a reflection of the earliest religions and cults. Not just Teutonic/Celtic, but with the potential to represent any "tribal" community. It's the stuff you bring with you when you convert. The stuff that penetrates so many religions, even if it wasn't intended. The people who stole holy water to help their crops grow. That makes it the most open to interpretation - any religion/cult/fairy tale could fit into this bubble.
The Gods of the Empire of EaglesThe simple words "Empire of Eagles" bring the Roman Empire to the front of your mind. This makes me think of
the old gods as much as the Roman Cults. Remember that in most homes in Rome you were likely to find house gods, and major roads had crossroad shrines... I can't imagine the Roman pantheon without all the little guys sitting in corners waiting for their turn. The greek myths were stories before they were gods, and were a poor mirror for how to live your life. What if this represents the aspects of religion that exist in the home, with stories by the fireplace and little statues on the mantle. What if the old gods represent bigger issues and are worshipped by whole towns at once?
The Bloodless XristosIf you didn't have the sentence "some worshipers place him within a trinity of deities" I wouldn't even
think of christianity. Ok, maybe a little... but there's so much more there that's more interesting to me.
The Bloodless Xristos makes me think of the early christian church far more than organised catholicism. The most defining thing about early christianity was that it said "This is a new God, and yours are now wrong". The Roman Empire not only accepted most cults, but when they conquered a new place they
added the new gods to their own set. Assuming an appropriate analogue, the only reason Xristos isn't added to the mess is that believing in him is
mutually exclusive to believing in anything else. Meaning this represents trouble making and dissent. Christianity has spent longer as an organised religion than it has as a start-up cult. So treating this as christianity is adding a lot of pre-conceived ideas. What if Xristos is part of a family as large as Zeus', but still says "your old gods are nothing but carved stones". It has the same impact. Also, Christianity was incredibly secretive in it's early days because they were afraid of persecution. Making it more like a mystery cult than like it's dark age derivative.
The thing I like most about the
Bloodless Xristos is the name. If your blood is the most important thing in determining your worth, then joining a bloodless faction means joining a
rankless faction. It means that a peasant has the potential to own land one day. That's
huge politically. Infact, that could easily be the darkness that plausiblefabulist is missing out on - this could be the opportunity for the poor lower classes to become as cruel and opressive as their current leaders.
My pointBecause as much as "I like the sound of my own voice", I ought to have one. I love the blurry lines. I recognise the ambiguity, and I'm glad it's there. Instead of breaking history down into the different religions people followed, why not break down the different aspects of religion. Personal understanding meeting individual needs, Organised religion and it's impact on politics, The young punk who wants to shake things up. Also, I think judaism is different enough that it fits - it's about community, and about being an outsider who's not an outsider. It highlights the fact that when people move around, they bring their religion with them so that religion and myth don't evolve linearly.
I wonder what it would look like if you didn't have christianity in mind when you thought about Xristos, and if you didn't have the Roman/Greek Pantheon in mind when you thought about the Empire of Eagles? It's only a subtle difference, but what would change?