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Religion in the Twelve Colonies (RDM): Difference between revisions

From Battlestar Wiki, the free, open content Battlestar Galactica encyclopedia and episode guide
Who said anything about twelve?
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* [[Hera]] - ([[Home, Part II]])
* [[Hera]] - ([[Home, Part II]])


If the trend of using the Greek Gods continues, the others could be based on the rest of the Olympian Gods: Demeter, Hermes,     Hestia, Ares, Dionysus, Poseidon, and Hephaestos. Obviously, one of those gods cannot be included and keep the number to twelve, but it's anyone's guess as to which the writers will decide to remove. In addition, there is always the possibility of including Hades/Pluto.
If the trend of using the Greek Gods continues, the others could be based on the rest of the Olympian Gods: Demeter, Hermes, Hestia, Ares, Dionysus, Poseidon, and Hephaestos. Hera and Hades, while not Olympians, also figure prominently in greek legends.


According to the [[Sacred Scrolls]], the gods once shared a paradise-like existence with the people of [[Kobol]]. Later circumstances forced the exodus of the human population of Kobol to [[the Twelve Colonies]] and [[Earth]], and lead to Athena's suicide. See [[History of the Twelve Colonies]] for more.
According to the [[Sacred Scrolls]], the gods once shared a paradise-like existence with the people of [[Kobol]]. Later circumstances forced the exodus of the human population of Kobol to [[the Twelve Colonies]] and [[Earth]], and lead to Athena's suicide. See [[History of the Twelve Colonies]] for more.

Revision as of 06:43, 30 September 2005

This page is silly.
We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.


You have found a link that leads nowhere... deliberately.

Reasons?

The reason for this is to clean up the Special:Wantedpages, thus making our lives easier behind the scenes.

So, what links lead here?

There are too many to bother wasting our time listing. So here's a list of pages that link here. The religion of the Twelve Colonies, which the various characters of Battlestar Galactica practice to greater or lesser extent, is a polytheistic faith borrowed from real-life Greek mythology, with a strong emphasis on the philosophy of eternal return.

Belief

The Lords of Kobol

Colonial religion is centered on the Lords of Kobol, based on the Greek Gods. So far within the series, a total of six Lords of Kobol have been identified:

If the trend of using the Greek Gods continues, the others could be based on the rest of the Olympian Gods: Demeter, Hermes, Hestia, Ares, Dionysus, Poseidon, and Hephaestos. Hera and Hades, while not Olympians, also figure prominently in greek legends.

According to the Sacred Scrolls, the gods once shared a paradise-like existence with the people of Kobol. Later circumstances forced the exodus of the human population of Kobol to the Twelve Colonies and Earth, and lead to Athena's suicide. See History of the Twelve Colonies for more.

The existence of the Lords of Kobol is attested to by the survival of numerous artifacts, including the Arrow of Apollo, the Tomb of Athena and the Gates of Hera. However, although she accepts their historicity, Sharon Valerii, a Cylon, has called their divinity into question.

The Cycle of Time

"All this has happened before, and all this will happen again."

According to Gaius Baltar, this line from the Pythian Prophecy is very well known (The Hand of God). Laura Roslin later expands on it, reminding Kara Thrace,

"If you believe in the gods, then you believe in the cycle of time that we are all playing our parts in a story that is told again, and again, and again throughout eternity." (Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part I)

The notion of a circular progression of time (also known as eternal return or eternal recurrence) is foreign to the ancient Greek religion from which gods of the colonial religion are borrowed, but it is a common theme in other faiths. Various events throughout the series have led some characters to believe that they are playing out another turn of this cycle. See Sacred Scrolls for more detailed analysis.

Individual Practice

The Colonials display a wide spectrum of religious practice, ranging from Billy Keikeya's atheism (as suggested by Ronald D. Moore) to Corporal Venner's literalist readings of the Sacred Scrolls. Colonials express their faith in a number of ways.

Idols

At the end of the episode "Flesh and Bone", Kara Thrace, a devotee of the gods Artemis and Aphrodite, prays to them on the behalf of Leoben Conoy using figurines that bear a similarity to classic representations of both.

Rosaries

When Roslin begins to suffer from Chamalla withdrawl in "Fragged", corporal Venner, a fundamentalist from Gemenon, anxiously clutches a set of white prayer beads.

Group prayer

Some prisoners on the Astral Queen seeking rehabilitation have turned to group prayer. In the episode "The Farm", they greet Laura Roslin as a prophet and she provides them with a blessing.

Relics

Despite Gemenon's fundamentalist climate, the city of Delphi on Caprica was apparently of a mind to store an important religious artifact, the Arrow of Apollo, in a museum, rather than a devotional institution.

The Priesthood

The separation of church and state is less rigorous in the Colonies than in the contemporary United States. Laura Roslin is sworn into the presidency by a Priest, Elosha, who continues on in an advisory capacity within Roslin's administration. Priests also preside over military funerals, without regard for the beliefs of the deceased. That this is a matter of course is perhaps indicative of the religious homogeneity of the colonies.

Priests are apparently not required to practice celibacy, as in some Christian denominations. In the episode "Resistance", Chief Galen Tyrol states that his father was a priest and his mother an oracle.

According to Billy Keikeya, some priests use the Chamalla plant for its hallucinogenic properties. The prescient dreams it imparted to Laura Roslin may imply the use of something similar by Pythia, an ancient prophet.