PeterZ wrote:Jeff,
I am not restating my entire argument with each post. Let us review that argument.
Safehold has a monolithic religious, moral, legal and natural philosophy paradigm derived from the Writ. It is as stated in this snippet a seamless description of God's will.
God created EVERYTHING and left proof of this fact for every Safeholdian to recognize.
God, through His archangels, left behind His will for mankind found in the Writ.
He created the Church to guide mankind in the proper way of life that would please Him.
To a Safeholdian every aspect of life is touched by God. Skills passed from father to son since Creation were first given to man by the archangels. Blessings and curse are littered in every Safehodlians life that remind them that the world around them is the product of the active will of God and His archangels fighting the active malice of the Dark. This last sentence is worth repeating.
Every aspect of existence on Safehold is made possible by the active will of God and His archangels fighting the active malice of the Dark. As an example, microorganisms are demons set loose by Shan-wei to harm mankind but are thwarted by Hasting's(?) blessings. This belief is universally held outside of the St. Zherneau Inner Circle. There is no choice for Safeholdians but to accept those rules as facts of life, because as Merlin mused in this snippet the proof of God's existence is unassailable. His existence and His will are fact. Disobeying God is placing the souls of everyone an individual loves at risk. This isn't part of some nuanced theology that might be taught but part of the bedrock foundation of the Safeholdian belief structure and is at the very heart of the CoGA's power.
To be clear, I'm not disagreeing through this point. (Apart from what really is a quibble: that the details really are theology that is taught - it's just theology that's perfectly well evidenced and undisputed.)
To these people Clyntahn is terrifying and Duchairn is a godly man, but both are acting within the scope of the CoGA authority as given by God. Clyntahn has the authority to do what he does, but is corrupt and uses that power for impure motives. Duchairn is viewed as using his authority to help God's children. Recall Duchairn has not visibly supported Clyntahn's purge of the Vicarate. If the CoGA cleanses itself as it has done numerous times since Creation, that is part of God's plan. If the CoGA is defeated and dictated to by outside forces, how else is that described than a victory by the Dark? If the loyalist priests preach that the schism will not be healed. If many priests do not preach that, those that do will claim coercion. If those priests are removed from office, coercion is proved. If those priests are not removed, the rupture remains.
I'm suggesting that the attitudes of people outside the reach of the CoGA on Safehold - in the Empire of Charis, in government-loyalist Siddarmark, and in the privacy of a few open minds - clearly aren't running on these paths. Defeating the CoGA and dictating to them by outside forces is exactly what Siddarmark and Charis are after - wholeheartedly, with a vengeance, and with every expectation that God and Langhorne are on
their side. So clearly that attitude is possible on Safehold, and the best predictor for whether a person is a Temple/Clyntahn Loyalist or some sort of Reformer or member of the Church of Charis, is fear for their lives and those of their families, where applicable, and who is genuinely in the right otherwise.
There isn't any longer an unquestioned expectation that the Church, as represented by the Temple, is Langhorne's legitimate heir.
Any arguments made to assert that God has removed his authority from the CoGA must be made within the context of the Writ. The Writ, however, a stipulates that the CoGA HAS the authority to act as it has. Safeholdians have had that drilled ceaselessly into their heads. The only argument that might be made from the outside is that the authority God granted the CoGA has been abused. That argument is likely being accepted throughout all of Safehold by now. Once the jihadi forces have been destroyed, the truth of that argument will be universally accepted because God did not bless the CoGA forces with victory.
If the CoGA fights to the bitter end and is defeated, it will be concluded that everyone of God's agents within His Church has lost His blessing. If the perceived godly one, Duchairn, within the CoGA appears to recognize his error and attempts to fix it, he will be given the benefit of the doubt that God has NOT withdrawn His blessings from the CoGA.
I have to say that the perception of Duchairn as godly is a political question. Continuing the jihad does not get him that credit on the EoC side, or among more-or-less Loyalist Reformers. Ending the jihad doesn't get him that credit among the hardliners. Being Clyntahn's ally for years as a part of the Group of Four won't get him that credit among informed or suspicious people who know about Clyntahn's personal habits.
If the EoC does not accept the offer to negotiate, they will lose the growing certainty that God does bless their cause.
Would they? Surely, if they perceived it as a sincere and practical offer. But is there some reason for them to think that he could reign in Church abuses, accept the Church of Charis as a permanent reality, and not re-launch the jihad (either himself or a successor) down the road?
If they're orthodox in their theology, other than their stance on Temple authority, they could perfectly well read such an offer as Shan-wei's temptation to their softer nature - giving in to the lure of ending a war early, and allowing the Temple, her tool on Safehold, to recover and undo all their work.
They are not acting like they are waiting, hat in hand, for any peace offer that may come out of Zion, helpless to resist any suggestion for reconciliation.
Duchairn wants to heal the CoGA and knows that defeat by the EoC will make that healing infinitely harder and less likely than willingly reforming the CoGA. If he does not heal his church and the resulting generations of strife claims more lives, they will be on his head as he would see it. He must try to mitigate that cost in lives and reform the CoGA. This is at the core of his renewal of faith.
He's still hankering after a universal Church on Safehold, and to reform it. Certainly defeat by the EoC will mean the end of that universal church - the CoC has not even got the ambition of being that, should it win. But that can be detached from reforming the rump CoGA, and that reform may well
require defeat by the Empire of Charis. It may be that only in the wake of the defeat of Clyntahn's program and the jihad that a vision of the Church as shepherd and caregiver can take hold.
I don't think he quite sees the abandonment of a universal Church as an acceptable option yet; I just think he's got his head still in the sand that way.
If Duchairn promises reform under terms that the Allies must accept, the Allies will have no choice but to give peace a chance. This will be especially true, if Clyntahn is killed and the Inquisition is purged of his cronies. If the EoC ignores the honest peace overtures by Duchairn, it will be correctly seen as a desire to destroy the CoGA not to reform it. That will destroy the support of many in Old Charis and likely most in Siddermark and the rest of the Empire. They can't risk that.
I am not saying these options are best for the EoC and the good guys. I am saying these are the menu of options Duchairn will have before him. His projected decisions are based on the text of his internal monologues. I don't believe these fundamental elements of Safehold will change until the Writ is discredited and that won't be possible until the Return.
And I think you are giving the Church of God Awaiting (Temple branch) far too much respect and affection in the eyes of the people it has condemned to fire and death, who have broken navy after navy and army after army sent by Zion to torture and kill them and their children. They've got
their Church(es) now and they kinda like them. In Siddarmark's case, they've really got blood in their eyes, after the "godly" men of the Temple, anointed by Langhorne with the safety of their souls, cast them into bloody civil war, disease, starvation, rape and pillage.
I do think these people can resist quite a few sorts of peace offers and still think they're in the right. Religion here on Earth surely has that effect, and their own readings of the Writ can pull it off as well.