Solarian Catholic Church: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 15:56, 28 April 2020

Emblem of the Holy See
Catholic Church
Saint Peter's Cathedra
ClassificationCatholicism
PolityEpiscopal
HeadPope Joseph
as Bishop of Solaria
AdministrationHoly See via
Solarian Curia
Particular
churches
Churches
  • Solarian
  • Western Catholic
    Diocesan
  • Archdioceses (y)
  • Regular dioceses (z)
RegionWorldwide
FounderJesus Sotiras, according to
Catholic tradition
Origin1st century
Adunis, Solarian Empire
Members'x'
ClergyBishops: a number
Priests: a second number
Deacons: a third number

The Solarian Catholic Church, commonly known as the Catholic Church, is the largest denomination of Sotirianity. It is named for the city of Solaris, which is the seat of its leading Bishop, the Supreme Pontiff. The church is based on the teachings and practices of Jesus Sotiras and his immediate students, the Teresarada. The central theology of the church, which governs both the organization of the church hierarchy and its practices is the Sotirian Imitation as described in the Dyophysitist Creed.

The Catholic Church teaches that it is the primordial faith, through its relationship with the Atudite faith, as well as the original and only true Sotirian faith through the lineage of Saint Peter in particular and the Apostolic Teresarada as a whole. Because of this relationship to the person of Sotiras, as well as his teachings, all of the ordained members of the church take a specific Logion, or words spoken by Sotiras, as a calling. The most important of the Logion is the one for the Supreme Pontiff (Matthew 16:18–19), one for each of the members of the Papal Conclave, but there have even been orders of priests specifically organized to root out marital infidelity because of Sotiras’s admonitions against adultery (Matthew 5:27–28). The Supreme Pontiff’s status as “rock of the church” requires that all other orders be based primarily on his instruction and authority.

In its current form under the Bishop of Solaria, the Catholic Church has continuously existed since the death of Sotiras in 33 AD, making it the oldest institution in the world. In this way, the Catholic Church has been both an observer of and participant in the development of Eastern Euclea and Northern Coius. <intermediate events>. From the beginning of the second century up until the 'Lesser Schism' in the 12th century, the Catholic Church and the Epismalist Church shared communion. In the 16th century, the Amendist Revival, Reformation and Counter-Reformations caused lasting divisions across political, ethnic and geographic boundaries with long-lasting repercussions and consequences.

The Catholic Church maintains teachings, beliefs and dogmas that have caused issue historically with other Sotirian groups. These include the belief of sanctification, suppression of 'heresy' and the refusal to ordain women as priests on the belief that they have a 'special, but different' role. In modern society, much of the church's sexual teaching has received criticism in the Eastern World, particularly on the social issues of homosexuality, contraception, abortion and gender transition and its underlying political influences in numerous societies.

Name

Beliefs

Solarian belief is based on the debate and commentary of theologians, the two testaments of the Bible, and the traditions of the church itself. The church claims that it holds the sole earthly authority to interpret those three sources of doctrine and that other Sotirian groups have erred in their interpretations because only the Solarian Church is guided by the Holy Spirit. The fundamental and oldest statements of belief are called "creeds", other statements of belief are called canon--these can be compared to constitutional laws and normal legislative codes.

Deity

The Solarian Church is monotheist and worships only one supreme and eternal deity, which has many names, but is most commonly referred to as "God". Since the Solarian Churh also claims to be a part of the primordial faith, it has carefully specified that the God it is devoted to is "God of Abraham, God of Isaac, and God of Jacob", which links it to the Atudite faith. The Solarian God is, however, not compatible with the Atudite God, which is explicitly singular and non-trinitarian, while the Solarians promote the concept of the Trinity. The Trinity is combination of the three persons of God--the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit--each of which exists as an indivisible part of the one God. The apparent contradiction between both having three distinct parts and those parts also being indistinguishable is embraced by the church as a sacred mystery.

Part of the mystery of the trinity is the birth and person of Jesus Sotiras. Sotiras was alleged to be born of a virgin, Mary, and also a part of the trinity. Sotiras is specifically considered to be the manifestation of the "Son", sometimes all called the "Word" before its incarnation as Sotiras. Sotiras was entirely human and entirely divine, which makes him part of the trinity. Sotiras lived a human life, although he has had many miracles attributed him, and was eventually executed. This execution acted as a kind of self sacrifice. Since Sotiras was both God and man, he is considered the ideal form of male human, and much of Solarian canon law is based on imitation of Sotiras.

Ego

The Ego of the church is its description of its own role within their beliefs. Unlike some other religions, in which their beliefs are also the laws of nature, the Solarian Church is inalienable from it's doctrines. Without the direct lineage to Sotiras and Saint Peter, there is not possible salvation or communion with God. For example, in Satyism, a person can accidentally reach enlightenment without intention or instruction, but in Solarian Catholicism, only the church itself is capable of performing their rites and interpreting the scriptures.

Members of the church's clergy are still bound by the underlying Sotirian Imitation, which is the basis of the church's doctrine, but their duty also extends to a particular charismata. When taking vows as a priest or member of the monastic community, the pledger must recite one of the Commands of Sotiras as their special duty for obedience and imitation. In doing so, the pledger joins (or occasionally creates) a ecclesiastic order. Since everyone who joins the clergy must take this part of the vow, all consecrated members of the church are part of an order. This has also led to the church to view itself as the physical embodiment of the scriptures.

Resurrection

The Catholic Church teaches that there are two forms of judgement after death. There is paticular judgement, which deals with the soul of an individual after their body dies, and there is the eschatological Last Judgement, in which a final judgement will be delivered by God during the end of days. Upon death, Solarians believe that their soul will be resurrected to Heaven if they lived a life of "good works" along the Imitation, as well as repenting their sins and accepting the mercy of God. Those who have not accepted the word and have not participated in the Imitation, as well as those who have lived in mortal sin without repentance, are believed to go to Gehenna. Gehenna as a state of being is almost one of non-existence, which the Catholic Church defines as "a state of definitive self-exclusion from communion with God and the blessed."

There are exceptions for the unlearned and those who are genuinely ignorant of the Church can still be saved if they lived their life as close to an Imitation as possible. This a contentious point throughout much of the earlier church and a dividing line amongst some Amendist groups. Much of these teachings were expanded by early Church fathers, including Justin Martyr.

Heaven

In Catholic artwork, heaven is often "physically" above the Earth.

Early Sotirians during the time of the Solarian Empire believed in the idea that Sotiras' redemption of humanity was preparing the world for the Kingdom of God on Earth that would be focused around the city of Adunis and that it would happen in their lifetimes. When this failed to materialise, most believers began to shift away from the belief that there would be a physical paradise and rather that Sotiras had "opened the way to eternal life" in an afterlife.

The belief during the early Sotirians fluctuated from visualising the afterlife as a tiered city, to a state of total resurrection on earth by the time of the Second Coming to the belief that the afterlife was an immaterial state of existence outside of the cosmos. The latter view is that which gained credence and acceptance by the Council of Dyophys.

Heaven is believed to be the summation of all existence, with believers experiencing the beatific vision and joining God and other believers in a life everlasting of definitive happiness, free from impurity, vice and pain. All material possessions are discarded and unnecessary in heaven and the attachments made in life are considered to be ultimately inconsequential to the unity in creation achieved in the afterlife.

Hell

The early view of hell, a realm of fire and torment, on an icon in Yeruham Monastery, Tsabara
The Medieval and early modern view of hell, a realm of frigid cold and suffering, as described in Dante's Inferno
An artistic interpretation of the 'canonical' view of hell, hell as void.

Hell, or Gehenna, is another form of afterlife described in the Catholic teachings. It is viewed as the polar opposite of heaven; a state of existence so void of happiness and worth that those who are cast into it are tortured for eternity. Historically, the Catholic church has struggled to maintain a definitive canon on what Gehenna itself was. Whilst many in the hierarchy of the church believed hell to be a state of being rather than a physical location, many laymen held belief in that hell was a physical location.

Catholicism teaches that consigned to hell alongside unrepentant sinners and those who knew of the word but did adhere to it are Satan and his devils.

The canon of the church teaches that hell is not a place, but a state of being that is accentuated by it being a place of self-exclusion that was entered willingly. Pope Joseph has referred to it as an "empty and cold void devoid of anything one would consider save for suffering and loneliness".

Practices

Organization

History

Criticism