Lukhtdau

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Revision as of 19:14, 18 March 2022 by TheInferiorDyl (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Lukhtdau''' is a Proto-Vistari religion that originated amongst the seafaring Proto-Vistari peoples of eastern Concord around 300 BC. The first recorded example of the faith is the Dead Sky Tablet (Vistarian'':'' ''Dodelucht plaat'') written around 271 BC, whose Proto-Vistarian name grants the name of the contemporary religion. While the religion's original source is unknown, the faith was codified by Miel Tille following the departure of the Koers to modern day [...")
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Lukhtdau is a Proto-Vistari religion that originated amongst the seafaring Proto-Vistari peoples of eastern Concord around 300 BC. The first recorded example of the faith is the Dead Sky Tablet (Vistarian: Dodelucht plaat) written around 271 BC, whose Proto-Vistarian name grants the name of the contemporary religion. While the religion's original source is unknown, the faith was codified by Miel Tille following the departure of the Koers to modern day Vistaraland, with the eldest patrilineal descendant of Tille holding the title Prediker van de Oudthuisers (Preacher of the Oldhomers, or Preacher of the Concordians), which acts as the head of the faith.

Followers of Lukhtdau do not worship a deity or pantheon of deities, instead believing in the Ledicht - loosely translated to "Aether" or "Void" - as an abstract shifting consciousnesses to which spirit is ripped from in the creation of life, and is returned to after death. Lukhtdau practices do not orient around the worship of the Ledicht, rather it seeks the goal of attainment to the abstract entity through mediation and the bringing of oneself to near-death, with the belief that being closer to death allows the spirit to better understand the Ledicht, in a ritual known as the Opening.