The 6th Scroll is most famously quoted for the following line:
ARP:G pg 341 wrote:
There are those who bow to the will of the Gods, and there are those who supplant that will with their own.
This quote usually gets dropped in the sections that deal with spell casters. It opens the spell casting section in the Core Book. But is this really what the scroll writers, much less Illiir, were talking about? My personal reading is more plain...that there are people who are serving the higher cause of the Gods, and selfish people doing their own thing...
Does anyone out there have any idea what the rest of the VI scroll says, or what the context of the quote is? Beyond headlining the spells section?
Nierite wrote:
...snip...Eldritch is considered something of a Heresy, but there is nothing MECHANICALLY to prevent an Eldritch caster from taking Initiate...
I moved this over from another thread where we have been looking at the idea of a wizard being an initiate of the gods. I would love to hear comments about how herritical Eldritch casting is perceived by the player base. Although it is clear that some within the Church (Mother or Milandesian) think that Eldritch casting is an act of supplanting the will of the Gods (again see page 341). It also seems clear to me that Eldritch casters are not seen as heretical by the church leadership.
ARP:G pg 341 wrote:
(after an exchange where a kid asks a priest/tutor about sorcery, the priest says it supplants the will of the gods, and another kid asks if that doesn't make it heresy)..."What is considered heretical behavior and what has been accepted by the powers that be is not for me to decide, my dear. But holy Revelation clearly states any being, orgnization or power that seeks to elevate itself on par with the Gods is profane before the eyes of the Gods." There, that should be neutral and obsequious enough so as not to draw the attention of the Holy Inquisistion (the priest thought)
It has always been my understanding in the last campaign that the "common man" fears and blames arcane casters for unleashing the Time of Terror...a mostly false belief (with a little sliver of truth in it). Which is why eldritch magic can't be trusted...and sorcerers should be feared. More learned "elites" do not necessarily subscribe to this view.
But it seems to me in this campaign that the Church is inching closer to a confrontation with arcanists. Do others see this difference? Or is it just me?