Jorath
Jorath was a major god in the Thauzunian Orthodoxy, associated with borders, thresholds, and defined limits. In pre-Fall belief, Jorath governed separation rather than exclusion. His domain included physical boundaries, legal jurisdictions, and social distinctions that allowed systems to function without overlap or confusion. Boundaries were viewed as necessary features of order, not obstacles to unity.
Orthodox doctrine treated thresholds as moments of transition that required recognition. Crossing a border, entering an office, changing legal status, or moving between social roles were all considered acts that fell under Jorath’s authority. Failure to recognize such transitions was believed to cause instability, as individuals or institutions operated outside their proper domain. Jorath ensured clarity of position and responsibility.
Jorath was closely associated with gates, charters, and formal demarcation. Pre-Fall teachings emphasized that boundaries had to be clearly marked and maintained. Ambiguity was considered dangerous, allowing authority, obligation, or accountability to blur. Jorath’s influence reinforced the idea that order depended on knowing where one thing ended and another began.
No knowledge of Jorath survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to his name, symbols, rites, or conceptual role in modern Vey’Zari culture. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its disappearance, all structured understanding of Jorath vanished. He is not remembered or reinterpreted, existing only as a reconstructed element of pre-Fall religious order rather than as part of any living belief system.
Orthodox doctrine treated thresholds as moments of transition that required recognition. Crossing a border, entering an office, changing legal status, or moving between social roles were all considered acts that fell under Jorath’s authority. Failure to recognize such transitions was believed to cause instability, as individuals or institutions operated outside their proper domain. Jorath ensured clarity of position and responsibility.
Jorath was closely associated with gates, charters, and formal demarcation. Pre-Fall teachings emphasized that boundaries had to be clearly marked and maintained. Ambiguity was considered dangerous, allowing authority, obligation, or accountability to blur. Jorath’s influence reinforced the idea that order depended on knowing where one thing ended and another began.
No knowledge of Jorath survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to his name, symbols, rites, or conceptual role in modern Vey’Zari culture. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its disappearance, all structured understanding of Jorath vanished. He is not remembered or reinterpreted, existing only as a reconstructed element of pre-Fall religious order rather than as part of any living belief system.
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