The Rontran foundations have no centralized hierarchy.
Each is independently managed by its senior member,
though some foundations in one kingdom or geographic
area might form a council. Even without a central authority, each member knows where they stand in the religion.
There are three holy orders within the Rontran church:
the sowers (clergy), wardens (holy warriors), and gleaners.
Sowers have three levels of status: prelates, grand prelates,
and elders of the faith. Wardens and gleaners do not have such formal ranks. Sowers run the foundations, and are
considered the authorities in any matter concerning the
Rontran faith.
A typical foundation hosts at least five prelates and one
grand prelate. In fact, a foundation cannot be established
without a grand prelate. Larger foundations have three
or four wardens in residence. Gleaners are almost never
found in foundations, and are instead inhabit shrines
found in the remote wilderness.
Sowers of Rontra
The sowers are the clerics of the Rontran
faith. Their name comes from farming,
not because they are all farmers, but as a
reference to what they do: plant the seed
of Rontra’s wisdom and goodness in the
hearts and minds of all they meet. Just
as a farmer cannot make a
seed grow by himself, so
are the sowers unable to
make this seed of peace
take root. It is up to
people to nourish their
own moral strength.
Most sowers reside in foundations, ministering to Rontra’s worshipers.
There are those in the order who eschew
connection to any establishment, seeing the earth as their
ministry.
These wandering sowers are usually quite popular,
for they heal the sick and the maimed, and always seem to
show up just when they’re needed most.
Although the Rontran faith has no higher order that that of the sowers, they
need not work at a foundation, but most do because it’s the
best way to study, and perform Rontra’s works.
Many small farming villages across the land benefit
from Rontran foundations’ charity. They often build small
shrines to the Earth Mother in outlying communities,
stationing prelates at these shrines for periods up to five
years. Ideally, the prelates train acolytes to take over their
ministries once they move on to other duties.
Wherever a sower is stationed, whatever his duty, the order
sees his function as offering all people, common and high,
a helping hand and advice to help them accept their varied
places in the world and be at peace. Sowers sometimes speak
in what seem like riddles, to avoid telling people what to do.
They shun confrontations when dealing with people who are
good of heart, but when faced with evil, particularly unnatural and fiendish forces, sowers become implacable foes.
Most sowers are lawful good and, like Rontra, believe
there must be an order to everything in nature, including
peoples’ lives, for the world to be at peace. They desire the
happiness from all people, high and low, and work within the
established order to promote it. While they oppose tyranny,
they see nothing wrong with a system of peasant farmers and
wealthy landowners. In fact, they convince those who want
to rebel against this established order that they must accept
their place in life. This is one of the cores of their belief:
accept who and what you are, and you will find unbounded
joy.
They espouse moral good in other ways, though, and
oppose efforts oppress the people or steal from them.
The neutral good sowers are more ambivalent about
established social orders. They see many cases where
change can improve lives. However, they continue
to adhere to the basic tenets of the faith, and do not
command good-hearted people to change their lives,
preferring to advise. Many neutral good sowers are
wanderers, less interested in the foundations than their
counterparts. They seek out the world’s most dangerous
areas, where they can do good deeds.
Oddities among the brethren, lawful neutral sowers seek
and obey authority almost compulsively. They create hierarchies where none exist. Most sowers with this outlook
believe the flaw in mortal reasoning is easily found—and it’s
their dissatisfaction with order. If everyone accepted their
place unconditionally and performed their role properly, the
world would function perfectly and peacefully. Lawful neutral sowers try to guide those who have fallen out of their
place back into it, and wage personal crusades against forces
outside the natural order, such as the undead.
Prelates
Initiate sowers are named prelates, a title they bear for the
first many years of their careers. The Rontrans hold that
all prelates are equal. Once admitted into the order, they
can go where they believe Rontra wants them—unless
commanded directly not to by the grand prelate of the
foundation. The foundations have lawful good tendencies,
however, and most prelates obey even implied instructions
even they’re not strictly required to. A prelate is addressed
as “brother” or “sister,” and introduced by full title.
Grand Prelates
The only person in a foundation empowered to command
others is its grand prelate. When a foundation loses its
grand prelate through death or departure, or when a new
foundation is established, all the local prelates gather for
a great council to name a new grand prelate. All voices
are equal in these councils, called moots, regardless of
age or experience. Prelates run the moots in a very orderly
fashion, with every attendant getting a chance to debate
the matter before them. Thus, moots can take as long
as a month before these prelates agree unanimously on
the identity of the new grand prelate. Grand prelates are
undisputedly in charge of the foundations and, since there
is no higher authority, they become the area’s arbiter of
religious law. Prelates obey the grand prelate from their
foundation, even if they don’t want to.
A foundation must
have a grand prelate to be considered a foundation—otherwise it is a shrine. If a grand prelate cannot be decided
on, the foundation is reduced to a shrine and put under
the authority of the nearest foundation with a grand
prelate. Grand prelates are addressed as “mothers” or
“fathers,” and introduced by full title.
Elders of the Faith
Whether grand prelate or not, eventually a sower becomes
so powerful that all recognize him as an elder of the faith, or
“great elder.” These venerable leaders have usually performed
great quests or other monumental tasks in the service of
Rontra. It is considered odd for great elders to continue to
serve as grand prelates if they hold the office. Most give
up the position. They travel throughout the land. Visiting
foundations, they lend their wisdom and aid when required,
harrying the foes weaker members of the faith simply cannot
approach. A great elder is addressed as “grandmother,” or
“grandfather,” and introduced by full title.
Joining the Sowers
To become a prelate, a person must show a gift of understanding Rontra’s teachings. The faith is complex, with
thousands of recorded prayers and three different forms
of ministry (farming, treasures of the earth, and fertility). A prelate must understand all of these, and be just
as prepared to tend to the spiritual needs of dwarven
miners as those of young wives hoping to get with child.
Training usually takes five years, though wise candidates
have been admitted into the clergy in only two years. A
prelate might serve in a foundation, wander, or even run
a small shrine. Prelates become clerics upon completing
their training and must choose a domain associated with
Rontra for the Divine Domain class feature, such as Earth
or Nature.
Wardens of Rontra
Wardens are protectors of the earth, guarding the world
from those who would abuse her gifts, but primarily from
those powers that would pollute or pervert the natural
order. While sowers protect and guide the mortal
races, wardens seek out and end incursions
of unnatural forces such as the undead and
fiends such as demons and devils. While they
take orders from grand prelates or great elders,
wardens tend to be inveterate wanderers on a lifelong
mission against evil.
Wardens defend the earth from the depredations of
the unnatural. They consider all life sacred, and strive to
protect and nurture Rontra’s children. They must always
remember the reason for their struggle against the unnatural is to protect innocent life. Any warden who kills
without just cause, or defiles the earth and its treasures,
immediately loses her standing and is considered fallen.
Wardens must never imagine the ends justify the means—
they do not for Rontra, so they do not for her servants.
In determining what is “unnatural,” the simple rule to
follow is this: If it’s good or was born on the Material Plane,
it is not “unnatural.” While wardens do not like orcish brutality, they do not wish to eradicate orcs, as they are part of
the natural order.
Undead aren’t alive and fiends come from
other planes, and thus face the full force of the wardens’
wrath. Wardens do not oppose celestials, because these holy
beings do not actively pollute and destroy the natural order.
Wardens enjoy the company of any who oppose evil
through just means. They are closely tied with Morwynites and other lawful churches, and might ally themselves
with other divinely-powered, virtuous individuals from
other faiths. They shun the company of those who resort
to torture or brutality in the name of what they perceive
to be good, or anyone who knowingly commits evil acts.
They actively oppose anyone who creates undead, or summons evil beings from other planes.
Joining the Wardens
Rontra sometimes calls people to serve her. When she does,
they feel her voice in their bones, and become wardens.
Intuition tells wardens their duty to oppose the unnatural
forces that inhabit the world, whatever the cost, so many
leave behind established trades and lives to heed Rontra’s
call. Any warden can name an initiate warden who’s heard
the divine summons; this act makes the initiate a paladin..
The induction process and ceremony vary based on the
inducting warden and the prospective member’s personality. Many initiates are taken into secluded areas by their
sponsors and told tales of Rontra’s splendor for many days,
with little to sustain them but conversation’s distractions.
Other wardens lead an entire foundation in prayers for the
initiate’s mission, for days on end. There are even wardens
who were inducted into the order by being buried in dirt up
to their necks, for three days and nights. Regardless of the
ceremony, the newly created warden becomes master of her
own destiny, and may wander the lands freely on her order’s
universal quest to destroy the unnatural.
Once initiated, a warden has no
other office of rank, is addressed as
“sir” or “dame,” and is introduced by
full title. Wardens require no training to
be considered such, though most are wise enough to seek
out martial training. When it is time for wardens to swear
their Sacred Oath, they normally swear the Oath of the
Ancients. Most wardens are lawful good.
Gleaners of Rontra,
The third holy order of the Rontrans has little to do with
the foundations, and its members spends their time in
small farming communities. Called the gleaners, they
take their name from the poorest of the poor. At harvest
time, after the reapers cut the wheat and take it be stored,
gleaners come in and pick up the small pieces of grain
dropped in the process. They live off these scraps; a more
wretched people cannot be found in any countryside.
Rontra’s order of gleaners are mendicants, living off
what they are given by nearby farmers. They settle on the
outskirts of rural communities and ponder the nature of
Rontra’s teachings, while protecting the land from evil incursions—natural and unnatural alike.
The order came into existence on the uncivilized fringes of society long
ago, when the greatest threat to farmers were roving bandits who raided them for food. The gleaners were warriors
inspired by Rontra, who rose from farm communities and
drove off bandits in exchange for food. Eventually, they
coalesced into an order and now they are respected, if
little heard from, members of the faith.
It is not an easy mantle to wear. The gleaners have no
property or families, and often live rough, without roofs of
their own. Eventually, they become tied to the land they
protect. While there are certainly traveling gleaners seeking out rural communities in need of aid, by the end of
their careers (should they live long enough), they invariably settle in a single region.
Joining the Gleaners
Anyone who has a love for common people, and is prepared to take up arms to defend them and their lands,
might make an appropriate gleaner. Fighters, rangers, barbarians, and monks (especially monks who practice the
way of the four elements) are all likely to become gleaners, and more than a few rogues have joined as well. It is
unheard of for those who require books and other trappings of civilization, like wizards and bards, to become
gleaners, as it is a calling that requires poverty. Gleaners
do not have titles, and many abandon their names. They
are simply called “friend” or “brother” by those they protect. Admission to the order does not require any rite of
passage; a person is simply called to serve the order and
takes on the mantle of gleaner.
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