Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Gods of the World: The Lightless

The Lightless are the wardens of secrets, shadows and symbols. They preside over everything that must be hidden, withheld or disclosed for a greater purpose. As a polymorphic deity, the Lightless are generally represented as an amorphous figure with long necks and multiple heads, sometimes hidden behind enigmatic masks. They are said to have had multiple mortal incarnations throughout history, with the original form dating back from the Great Birth in the beginning of time and space.

The deity is surely ambiguous and ambivalent in its domains and purposes, which leads to a variety of followers from sometimes entirely opposing factions. This may implicate, for example, in the emergence of conflicts between those that wish the safekeeping of a certain piece of object or information whose disclosure might be too dangerous, and those that wish to destroy it for the same reason.

The Lightless are also connected with the transience of life, the withering of memory and the ultimate passing of all things, with its theologists pointing that everything that is tends inevitably towards the Great Void, in opposition to the Great Birth that once originated them. Their priests are usually hired to undertake the sending of the dead in some cultures.

Symbols, signs and language are also believed to fall under the protection of the deity by many, as a means of both encrypting and decrypting meaning from conscious and unconscious communicative efforts from all beings. It is said that the Lightless have the power to lay down the shadows of the unknown but also to pull them away, in the pursuit of the veiled truths about existence.

The Numbers of Caribdis are some of the organized groups that are known to worship the Lightless. The Winged Darkness, an extremist sect connected to the Numbers, believe that the deity is not a many-headed entity, but a single-headed one. They seek to destroy any source or material that spreads lies and deceit about an apparent polytheistic nature of the god, as opposed to a god of many incarnations, as they themselves believe.

Source here.

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