Hi PeterZ,
My comments below between the **.
[quote="PeterZ"][quote="lyonheart"]Hi PeterZ,
Where is the textev that the CoGA has cleansed 'itself numerous times'?
Given the mysterious death of Seijin Khody, it hasn't been cleansed in a very long time, regardless of any public pronouncements, ie any have been more cosmetic than effective.
We have no indication of any such cleansing in the last 200 years or so since St Everard was murdered, which is rather long to wait hoping something happens for the better .[/quote]
Too literal, Lyonheart. Those changes you metioned represent adjustments. Not all were good, but they did maintain a continuity within the Church. No textev, butit is safe to assume there were other similar changes and shifts.
** So continuity or 'adjustments' are better than any evidence of true cleansing?
From the textev we have, the usurpation of power by the inquisition was easily the biggest change in the CoGA administration in almost a thousand years, and it certainly wasn't a cleansing, though I expect that how it was passed off to any of the laity who heard about it.
What are some other changes and shifts that you think might be comparable?**
[quote="lyonheart"]
Given that the circle waited 20 years without there being a cleansing implies they're so rare they would be signally recognised.
Once the reputations of the vicars Nynian has had assassinated become public thanks to OWL, that Clyntahn's supporters have been protected by the inquisition to continue their criminal acts as long as they supported him, how much lower can the vicarate's reputation fall?
Since losing the jihad obviously means the CoGA is no longer being blessed by God for some reason [what did they do to be so punished?], perhaps those surprised might consider that the CoC and reformists are right after all.
Given that the Holy Writ likely teaches that the victory over the fallen was inevitable, the alliance victory proves God is on their side.
Especially when the CoGA members experience the results of the alliance winning which are largely positive.
[/quote]
Changes in the internal dynamics of the Church happen consistently. Did the Group of 4 spring from the ground one fine morning? No, that core structure shifted from something like the lieutenants of the Grand Vicar to the actual powers behind the throne. The same can be said about the Inquisition. It took time to shift from one order of several responsible for fighting heresy to the judge, jury and executioner with respect to addressing heresy.
The CoGA has changed over time. I don't believe I need textev to believe the CoGA is still changing and has been until OAR.
** From Maikel's explanation to Irys, the mere survival of the CoC will compel permanent paradigm changes in the CoGA.
I imagine some changes have already begun to ooze their way into the CoGA, partly from the few paying attention to what the CoC is saying and recognizing the vast chasm between them, and others who witness the effects of the CoC doctrine in making the people happier, NTM more productive etc.**
[quote="lyonheart"]
What evidence is there that Rhobair wants, let alone sees any chance of 'healing' the CoGA?
Duchairn's renewal of faith is a personal matter, totally independent of what was happening in the CoGA; there is no indication he's wanted, desired, mentioned or tried to reform anything about the CoGA, nor has his example generated much interest by his colleagues in following his example.
That alone indicates how far from salvage the vicarate is.
Being a realist, knowing all of the above, hoping let alone expecting to heal the schism is rather remote in Rhobair's thinking or planning in my opinion.
[/quote]
I believe that Rhobair wants a unified CoGA. If he thinks the jihad can force the recalitrants back into the fold, he would sadly pursue the jihad until he achieves victory.
** Duchairn may want a unified CoGA, but I think he's smart enough to have finally recognised what Nahrmahn saw back in BSRA, that Charis in essentially unconquerable by the temple.
From some of his thoughts he's not very happy about all the exemptions Clyntahn has made to adopt the new technologies to fight the jihad; this implies he'd prefer to rely more on God, ie his belief or faith that true faith and confidence in the Lord alone is all that's needed to triumph, is very interesting in that shows he sees the danger of copying the innovations, yet doesn't seem to appreciate what not adopting those innovations would mean, which is somewhat surprising in someone so realistic about so much else.**
I also believe that he wants to reform the CoGA. I don't believe he can accomplish this without another bloody purge. This time of the Inquisition. I believe he recognizes this.
** Your implication is that he has planned on destroying the inquisition, at least in the vicinity of the temple and hopefully Zion; but given all its undercover agents etc, how can he expect to hold onto any power when any allies he may have left are being struck down in droves?
Given the size and scope of the inquisition, especially Clyntahn's vast expansion of its manpower, he's going to need a lot more than a few friendly temple guards.
The inquisition won't be his only enemy.
All those interested in maintaining their power and perks, ie the rest of the vicarate and all their family clans, NTM all the remaining 'faithful nations' are going to be stopping him ASAP.
Perhaps you can mention who his true allies might be after he succeeds in eliminating Clyntahn, and begins to execute what you think is his agenda, because from all the evidence he would be rather lonely.**
His attitudes about reform were sufficient for Hauwyrd Wylsyn to approach him with that letter. This was almost the last gasp of the Zion Circle. Samyl Wylsyn the principle figure of the Zion Circle was not totally against the idea of a CoC. He recognized that the Church of Charis and the soon to be Empire would not submit to the CoGA hierarchy again. He could accept that. This is one of the same Wylsyns that believed they were descended from the archangels and tasked with protecting the CoGA. They have been doing that since before Schuler died.
Samyl Wylsyn was almost ready to invite Rhobair into the circle. Would he have done that had not believed Rhobair was not totally averse to reform? If Wylsyn could accept a separate CoC albeit with difficulty, might Rhobair also be willing to accept a separate CoC? No textev, but certainly a data point to consider in projecting decisions for Rhobair.
** You're the one claiming he wanted reconciliation, how do you reconcile your own internal conflict that he already might accept separation?.
Samyl Wylsyn was willing to contact Rhobair, to test the extent of his then new reborn faith; if he was so eager to do as you say, no wonder the circle fell so quickly, if such simple desire or hoping something was true was the extent or measure of the circle's vetting process.
My reading of the circle is that it was far more wise, being very careful and circumspect, the vetting process rather long and arduous; NTM among other things the circle didn't have the time left to vet anyone, let alone Rhobair, assuming he was willing, which from the textev, he wasn't.
Beyond that single contact its all your speculation, so to read so much into a few unknown words at a single breakfast is again really twisting things to match your claims.
Didn't you have the impression Hauwyrd's letter was something he did on his own, along with all the other things he did those last days without telling Samyl?
The gap between the doctrinal separation Samyl and the circle was willing to accept, regretfully but with full understanding of why, and Rhobair's recognition that some kind of reform is needed is rather vast and deep; ignoring or glossing over that divide doesn't impress me that your claims hold much water, if anything rather the reverse.
Rhobair being the practical sort of the textev, not your phantasm, I suspect offering recognition to the CoC and other reformists is really a precondition he knows he has to start with.
Of course that means he may not last all that long when the rest of the vicarate NTM the CoGA find out.**
[quote="lyonheart"]
What are the terms you think the alliance must accept?
What peace can Rhobair promise will persist beyond him when any hints of negotiation or admission of guilt will immediately trigger an internal civil war in the CoGA?
After more than 20 years of running the inquisition, who's left that isn't a Clyntahn crony?
10%? 5%? 2%
You seriously think the inquisition is going to accept its destruction quietly?
Even if Rhobair's peace overtures are truly honest, what chance are they in any way practical or worthwhile in pursuing?
[/quote]
There may well be more that you credit here. Bishop Maik in Dohlar doesn't seem to be cut from the same Clyntahn cloth. He subtly suggested that Thirsk take care of his own before doing anything rash. Had Maik been a Clyntahnista, Thirsk would have died for displaying enough for Maik to recognize as unease with the Inquisition's policies.
Even so, as I said above the Inquisiton needs to be purged quickly and thoroughly for Rhobair to have a chance at doing anything. Purging them from Zion is the first step.
** "Rots o' ruck."
Apparently Clyntahn has seen to it that the inquisition forces are the largest around the temple and Zion, NTM it has the only firearms.
While the Temple guard might be able to surprise many of them, the idea all the unknown undercover agents won't take revenge on anyone they perceive as a threat, Rhobair obviously being target number one, is asking a bit much.
Bishop Maik is such an obvious rare exception as Thirsk fully recognised, that he clearly indicates the other 95-99% are Clyntahn's.
I think the good ones are very greatly outnumbered.
You still haven't mentioned what terms the alliance must accept, or the prospect of any of Rhobair's offered promises being actually carried out and fulfilled?**
[quote="lyonheart"]
How can a disarmed, impoverished church enforce any of its peace promises, even if it were willing to try?
Ignoring such petty peace overtures, what I can only see as vapor; the EoC will actually be quite properly seen as being prudent and wise in doing so, not giving up it's costly yet worthy prize of victory for 'a mess of pottage' of such pathetic promises.
Since the CoGA has pledged to destroy the EoC, why can't it destroy the CoGA in return, in simple reciprocity as Admiral Yairley pointed out in HFaF, since an eye for an eye is evidently in the Holy Writ?
[/quote]
An eye for an eye is not a call for vengeance, Lyonheart. It is call for limiting vengeance to only an eye for an eye and not more than that. An eye for an eye is a call for justice.
** While that may be our current interpretation of that call for justice, but that isn't what the CoGA and their priests are teaching their 'faithful' is it?
So I think their laity can at least grasp the principle of reciprocity, whether or not the CoC acts as it so very obviously could.**
Because Clyntahn was unjust, does justice demand the CoC and the EoC destroy the CoGA? Is that justice from the average Safeholdian's POV? Nynian can attest that not all the Vicarate were like Clyntahn. The most outspoken opponents of Clyntahn are dead. There are still those that may well oppose Clyntahn's and his minions if given the opportunity. An opportunity like Clyntahn dead and his minions purged out of Zion.
With the key driver of the jihad dead and the remaining hierarch offering to negotiate a peace, is it justice as seen by Safeholdians to continue to fight and seek the destruction of God's Church? God has removed the primary threat to the CoC and EoC with Clyntahn's death. Why fight further if the CoC's grievance's can be addressed without more bloodshed?
I don't believe this is best for the CoC. I do believe that most Safehodians would consider continuing the war under those conditions unjust.
** First of all, as I've pointed out repeatedly, Charis has never said they want or intend to destroy the CoGA [granted its Merlin's private vow that will be eventually kept over generations], but all their public ire has been aimed solely at the Go4 who started the whole mess, as has the republic's evident war aims also made clear.
So rather than destroying the CoGA, the CoC, the other reformists and the alliance can all claim [as they have] that they're trying to restore it to what God intended.
Unfortunately for the CoGA, separating the Go4 from the vicarate and the CoGA isn't an easy surgery the rest of the CoGA wants or even realises that it strongly needs such surgery, so its going to have to be a rather painful removal.
If Rhobair recognizes reform is required, eliminating not just the inquisition [another obvious precondition for any serious talks] but removing the Go4 itself from power and preventing any possible future 'restoration' or reinvention is not only required as other threads have discussed previously; of course that immediately sets up the question of how that can be enforced when all the remaining powers that be are no longer in power, if they're that lucky.
I think Rhobair sees that the Go4 must be removed from power, and prevented from ever regaining it, even if Magwair and Trynair don't.
So how long will they remain his allies when they find out?
Will they be among the first he removes from office, if he's that 'lucky'?
Secondly, even if your straw-man argument were correct, how would the CoGA laity know the alliance continued to fight to destroy the CoGA long after it had clearly won and achieved their survival?
By that argument, Charis was wrong to help Siddarmark even a little, because clearly [at least to us omniscient readers] it had already won effective independence from the temple thanks to its naval superiority, aside from the occasional Rakurai, of course.
Nearly all the CoGA congregations won't have a clue the war-fighting gap is that huge until long after this war is over, some evidently from painful personal experience in the following religious wars.
If the allies had held off occupying Japan, as its militarists wanted, to allow it to recover NTM preserve their power, which is what you're claiming Rhobair is angling for, rather than demilitarize not only its war-making potential but the society itself to assure it wouldn't ever threaten them again, they would rightly be seen as letting that plague just fester, leaving it to their children or grandchildren to clean up the full mess, not very wise at all.
Again, since the Go4 first attempted to destroy Charis, then proclaimed the jihad when that failed, as the CoGA membership know full well, the Go4 is the true culprit and how else can they be removed except by force?
The onus of demonstrating it has forever reformed remains entirely in the CoGA's court, unless the alliance maintains a military presence in Zion etc; so what other proofs do you think the CoC and alliance can seriously accept?
[quote="lyonheart"]
How is naturally fighting for their survival somehow seen as evil?
Since their war is aimed at the Go4, not the vast membership of the CoGA spread across the continents, the EoC has never threatened to destroy the bulk of the CoGA membership [unlike the CoGA], ie the church in general or their beliefs, and has plainly made that point repeatedly even in private conversations, as well as sermons and public pronouncements, so twisting their struggle into an obvious evil seems too much of a stretch.
[/quote]
Fighting for one's life is not evil. Continuing to fight when the threat to one's life is obviously removed may be evil. An eye but no more than an eye for an eye, heh?
[quote="lyonheart"]
Exactly when or how did the EoC state it only wanted to reform the CoGA?
Since even the TL's in Tellesberg know the CoGA has promised only annihilation to all of Charis etc regardless of whether they are fervent TL's, and all saw that promise being fulfilled in Siddarmark especially by our ex TL's now anti-CoGA soldiers, I doubt many would be upset if the alliance announced it was ensuring such atrocities would never happen to its citizens again.
The alliance menu of options is far greater than Duchairn's, and his is far more limited than you've suggested.
L
[/quote]
Sorry, Lyonheart, but I don't believe you credit sufficiently the reverence for the CoGA that exists in the hearts of most Safeholdians. To believe that the CoGA is beyond redemption is to believe that God gave mankind an imperfect gift. It would be far easier for the laity to believe that the men of the CoGA failed their duty. Yet Duchairn provides the counter example that although all men can fail, some might be redeemed through God's Grace and Love.
Cayleb and Sharley might persuade many within the Empire if not most that the CoC will remain separate from the CoGA to act as a counter balance should other men in the future take the CoGA into another unjust jihad. I doubt they can persuade more than a small minority that the CoGA must be destroyed. Its not that they had to state they did not want to destroy the CoGA only reform it, there is simply no appetite in their Empire to destroy the CoGA if it can be avoided.
The God that breathed life into their bodies and gave the Adams the knowledge to begin life on Safehold gave mankind the Church. Destroying that Gift is tantamount to turning away from God. Deal with the men responsible for the atrocities just as the ICA has done to Inquisitors in the fighting. Reform the CoGA back to where the archangels' original structure to make it more difficult for other men to abuse the power granted the CoGA. All this can be supported by most Safeholdians. Destroying the CoGA when the hierarchy has conceded their errors would be going too far.
This isn't my view. It is the view I believe exists on Safehold given the way Safehold was founded. This view will lead the CoC and EoC to accept an offer to negotiate with the CoGA if Clyntahn and the Inquisition have been neutralized to a large extent. Their demands might lead to a resumption of hostilities or might lead to acceptable reform. That is to be seen.[/quote]
** Again you're arguing against a straw man of your own imagining.
So Merlin should give up and turn himself off?
Right.
Seriously?
You really think RFC has created such an impossible situation our heroes won't somehow succeed?
By the time the alliance takes the temple in a year or so, there won't be that many TL's left in contact with the temple or Zion, basically just the western KotTL and northern Harchong; or less than a third of the current CoGA continental population, while the rest devolve to national churches, so the chaos and confusion within the CoGA will probably mean very disorganized opposition to the reformists etc.
Again the CoC, reformists and the alliance have never said they want or intend to destroy the CoGA; they have always distinguished their war aims as ending the Go4's evil rule from the CoGA, ie restoring the church to what God intended, so all your above concerns are moot at best.
Your definition of 'acceptable reform' needs to be further enunciated, since its so worthless at the moment, leaving aside the chance any acceptable honest reforms can get by the inquisition and all the other vested powers, not just the vicarate, which is infinitesimal.
You apparently assume that the CoGA's obvious generational corruption isn't a problem for the poor masses of ignorant uninformed serfs etc who devoutly worship all as they've been taught, though its obvious to anyone with a brain regarding the church's systemic sins, but the serfs etc are somehow quite aware of the many failings of their local leadership, but have never considered the same mortal corrupt men are running the vicarate etc and never connect the dots, nor have a clue of how deep and how long the rot has piled up in Zion and the temple.
Right.
I don't think they're that ignorant or self deceived, that like Nahrmahn they can still believe in God and know the temple and vicarate are corrupt if not evil, that they obviously serve the dark; and thanks to OWL's broadsides, the odds of information informing them correctly might be shifting faster than you think.
What are the odds that the MHoG may learn of Nynian and the SSK's news on the march from propaganda leaflets from the sky courtesy of rockets and balloons, or at least that's what Nahrmahn and OWL arrange?
Until the alliance dictates terms in Zion or at the temple, the bulk of the CoGA continental members won't accept them as an equal power, which they obviously will be, a prerequisite to accepting your proposed reforms including recognition of the reformists as also godly worshipers, though how they survived proves God is more with them than the temple, until your reforms manage that there will still be wars and atrocities by those god fearing CoGA members upon any who rightly point out the obvious CoGA faults, and of course any righteous response by the alliance etc will trigger another religious war and be their fault, after all if there weren't any reformists etc the CoGA atrocities wouldn't have happened.
Right.
Furthermore, it isn't just the inquisition that needs to be reformed.
The Go4 and their potential or likely replacements prevented from taking such power as well; how Rhobair plans to accomplish that will be fascinating to read if he's thought that far ahead, but I'm not sure he has.
In short its an impossible task you've assigned him, and even if Magwair and Trynair go along with him[!], it'll still be almost impossible since all the people we know of who want to reform the CoGA are still on the other side!
On the other hand, suppose the alliance etc take the temple and Zion, destroy the Go4, restore the CoGA organization to what you want [though obviously if it could be so usurped in a few centuries God didn't organise his gift very well] then leave the CoGA largely alone while they insist on and insure access to the temple for all reformists, ie internationalize it and Zion, because the thing in the basement confirms they're right and the reformists want everyone to know it.
Which is why they build at least a railroad to Zion from Siddar City if not from elsewhere, and pay for millions of poor pilgrims from the now much poorer CoGA countries to come and see for themselves.
How can the reactionary CoGA NTM national churches refuse them when a pilgrimage is required of all Safeholdians?
Again, all your many concerns are negated by the CoC and reformists pointing out they are saving the CoGA from the Go4 which it evidently cannot do itself, and even aiding all who want to see the new miracles in the temple financially when the reactionaries want to prohibit anyone from seeing the proof they're wrong.
The pilgrims seeing all the differences between the CoGA at the now internationalized temple and Zion may provide all the missionaries the reformists need back in their home countries.
This theological Akido, ie of turning the CoGA arguments back on themselves, appears to be the basis for at least some of the CoC's arguments, to anyone who'll pay attention.
Of course no one we know seems to be paying attention except Rhobair.
L