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Experimental TheologyOne important influence in earthly history is uncertainty over the existence and/or nature of Divine Influence(s). People will fight a war because of such ideological differences. Heresies and schisms arise. Religions evolve and change, sometimes drifting far from their founding ideals. All of these things are dramatic and powerful events that a GM might wish to incorporate into a campaign. But there’s the cleric problem. Powers are apparently very real in AD&D worlds, since they grant spells to clerics. A cleric out of favor with his deity is denied spells. This seems like the ultimate barometer of divine opinion. Cleric Arthur espouses the Old Doctrine; Cleric Bart seeks innovations. Arthur gets spells and Bart doesn’t. The Power’s opinion seems pretty clear, doesn’t it? What if Arthur’s spells were the only thing keeping a plague-ridden village alive, and Bart was carrying some secret sins?
Why the Powers Can Still Be MysteriousI don’t like the assumption that, because clerics have a connection to their deities, they have perfect knowledge about their Powers and the sort of worship the Power requires. Certainly they could. If your campaign world is the sort where Powers make regular appearances at all major temples and avatars regularly walk the streets, then it seems likely that the Powers would actively spell out their worship rites as many times as needed. What about a world where the Powers are a bit more remote? Consider the natural world for a moment. We’ve been living on Earth and taking notes for five or six millennia, and we still don’t know how everything works. Everyone knows things fall down, but a law of gravitation didn’t come along until the eighteenth century. Scientists show no signs of running out of things to discover; even mathematicians have new things to do. Everything natural in the world is real and operates according to certain laws, but we’re still in the process of figuring those laws out. That’s experimental science. So what if the Powers are real and operate according to certain laws? Would clerics be seeking those out? If doctors can heal based on the (entirely wrong) theory of the four humors for a few hundred years, can clerics worship wrongly as well?
The Fly in the OintmentIn typical AD&D, the cleric has a very specific code of behavior s/he must live up to. If the code gets broken, the spells go away. It’s a very all-or-nothing proposition in most cases. You might get a sect which demands more restrictions than the Power requires, but few who are going to be able to turn a faith on its head and still get spells. If a Power requires charity and poverty of its clerics, those who become greedy and fat will lose their spells. This seems pretty clear, and indeed is for most campaigns.
Getting Rid of the FlyYou can play some behind-the-scenes cosmological tricks to muddy the waters a bit.
By Any Other Name
My Evil Twin
Take the Worship and Run
Special Considerations
Beyond the Scope of This Portfolio
Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing
Religious Conflict Adventure IdeasClerics of the Sun God have decided to “burn away all impurities from the land” - that is, they’re out to kill all demi-humans (or unbelievers, or orcs, etc.) A Reform movement has sprung up which worships the “warming light of the Sun, which falls on man and dwarf alike.” PCs with the Reformers might try to reshape their faith from the inside out, or face their “fallen brethren” in the field. A cleric of an elven Power which focuses on the cycle of nature has decided that “it is time for the world to die, so a new one may grow from the decayed corpse of the old.” The orthodox elven clerics want the PCs to track down this rogue and stop her mad plans. Travelers have been found ritually murdered in the forest. Aspects of the mutilation mimic what clerics of the Huntress do to their monthly sacrificial deer. The temple protests its innocence. Is there a new cult growing, or is the temple hiding something? There’s a power struggle for the throne, and the PC cleric’s temple has taken one side. It is not, unfortunately, the side chosen by the Matriarch of the faith. The contenders for kingship will meet on the field of battle in a month and both expect their clerical supporters to provide healing for the troops, as proof of their loyalty. Will the PC bear arms against his own spiritual leader?
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