Marian Kapuhenasa: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{Infobox religion | name = Church of the Saintly Spirit of the Virgin Mary | image = | abbreviation = Marian Kapuhenasa | main_classification = {{wp|Religious syncretism|Syncretic}}{{efn|With various theological and doctrinal elements of Kapuhenasa and Catholicism.}} | scripture = The Anahuenna, the Books of Ecdysis, and the {{wp|Catholic Bible|Bible}} | theol...")
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'''Marian Kapuhenasa''', officially the '''Kapuhenasa Church of the Saintly Spirit of the Virgin Mary''', refers to a Christianised expression of the Kapuhenasa faith of the [[Loa]], originating as an assemblage of [[Kapuhenasa|Kapuhenasan]] and [[Catholic]] religious practices in [[Rumahoki]]; in particular, the series of religious movements that Kapuhenasa and Christian religious practice during the years of the [[Navidadian System]] in what's now southwestern [[Rumahoki]]. Marian Kapuhenasa works against the conventional understanding of Kapuhenasa and Christianity as two distinct religions, seeking out commonalities between both faiths and promoting an inclusive union of the two. Marian Kapuhenasa occupies a unique space in the demographics of Rumahoki; Rumahoki is often understood to be a predominately Christian nation, with Catholics spread all throughout the country, and with Protestants congregated in the northern [[Taineans|Tainean]] states.
'''Marian Kapuhenasa''', officially the '''Kapuhenasa Church of the Saintly Spirit of the Virgin Mary''', refers to a Christianised expression of the Kapuhenasa faith of the [[Loa]], originating as an assemblage of [[Kapuhenasa|Kapuhenasan]] and [[Catholic Church|Catholic]] religious practices in [[Rumahoki]]; in particular, the series of religious movements that Kapuhenasa and Christian religious practice during the years of the [[Navidadian System]] in what's now southwestern [[Rumahoki]]. Marian Kapuhenasa works against the conventional understanding of Kapuhenasa and Christianity as two distinct religions, seeking out commonalities between both faiths and promoting an inclusive union of the two. Marian Kapuhenasa occupies a unique space in the demographics of Rumahoki; Rumahoki is often understood to be a predominately Christian nation, with Catholics spread all throughout the country, and with Protestants congregated in the northern [[Taineans|Tainean]] states.


[[Religion in Rumahoki|Rumahoki is religiously united]] in terms of Christianity, with the real division being over the specific denominations within Christianity. Catholics comprise almost two-thirds of the total population, with Protestants, both {{wp|Calvinism|Reform}} and [[College of Levantine Churches|Collegiate]], making up twenty percent. Kapuhenasa, being a faith that's seemingly entirely foreign to the Christians, has historically been repressed by institutional means, thus forcing its practitioners to either convert or attempt to flee. However, many of these practitioners have instead attempted to bring forth religious harmony by fusing elements of both faiths.
[[Religion in Rumahoki|Rumahoki is religiously united]] in terms of Christianity, with the real division being over the specific denominations within Christianity. Catholics comprise almost two-thirds of the total population, with Protestants, both {{wp|Calvinism|Reform}} and [[College of Levantine Churches|Collegiate]], making up twenty percent. Kapuhenasa, being a faith that's seemingly entirely foreign to the Christians, has historically been repressed by institutional means, thus forcing its practitioners to either convert or attempt to flee. However, many of these practitioners have instead attempted to bring forth religious harmony by fusing elements of both faiths.
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Prior to [[1875]], the lands belonging to what's now the [[Rumahoki|Rumahokian]] [[Administrative divisions of Rumahoki#First-level divisions|states]] of [[Kalanatoa]], [[Na'aturie]], and [[Junu'urinia Ba'andasi-Navidadia]] were a part of the [[Loa Empire]]. The [[Loa|people]] living in the area were of the Kapuhenasa faith, itself having originated from the writings of the Anahuenna in the [[16th Century]] and the teachings of the [[Kirivia|Kirivian]] Sufi mystic Saȳd Kamáv Istiklav before developing in the [[18th Century|18th]] and [[19th Century|19th]] centuries. The Loa in the area would soon find themselves in a period of anarchy in 1875 after the collapse of the Loa Empire.
Prior to [[1875]], the lands belonging to what's now the [[Rumahoki|Rumahokian]] [[Administrative divisions of Rumahoki#First-level divisions|states]] of [[Kalanatoa]], [[Na'aturie]], and [[Junu'urinia Ba'andasi-Navidadia]] were a part of the [[Loa Empire]]. The [[Loa|people]] living in the area were of the Kapuhenasa faith, itself having originated from the writings of the Anahuenna in the [[16th Century]] and the teachings of the [[Kirivia|Kirivian]] Sufi mystic Saȳd Kamáv Istiklav before developing in the [[18th Century|18th]] and [[19th Century|19th]] centuries. The Loa in the area would soon find themselves in a period of anarchy in 1875 after the collapse of the Loa Empire.


In the midst of the chaos, groups of [[Delepasians]] would settle in what used to be the northeast corner of the Loa Empire, eventually establishing a republic known as [[Navidadia]]. These settlers would soon institute a series of institutional laws to suppress the Loa within their territory, which included forcibly converting them to [[Catholicism]] while stamping out the indigenous Kapuhenasa faith under pain of mutilation initially before it eventually turned into imprisonment for a certain amount of time.
In the midst of the chaos, groups of [[Delepasians]] would settle in what used to be the northeast corner of the Loa Empire, eventually establishing a republic known as [[Navidadia]]. These settlers would soon institute a series of institutional laws to suppress the Loa within their territory, which included forcibly converting them to [[Catholic Church|Catholicism]] while stamping out the indigenous Kapuhenasa faith under pain of mutilation initially before it eventually turned into imprisonment for a certain amount of time.


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