@Space Boyfriend @Empath
I will gladly do my best to explain it further, though there isn't really much to explain. Kedalup isn't really a traditional deity, and it's certainly not one that is recognised throughout Eden or even the Dreamscape. No, Kedalup is an Ansharin belief only. Kedalup is what the Ansharin call the world. While most of the other civilisations scattered across the world would refer to it as Eden; the Ansharin call it Kedalup.
Kedalup is also their 'God' in a sense because the Ansharin are a tribe who live off the land. The land is what gives them their crops, their water, their livestock; it keeps them alive. Without the land, Kedalup, the Ansharin would perish. For this reason the Ansharin have a very spiritual respect towards the land and recognise it as their God; the one that gives them life. There are no religious practices that the Ansharin perform to worship Kedalup, it isn't that kind of religion. The key principle of the Ansharin people is to take the gifts that Kedalup grants them in exchange for respecting the land.
A more appropriate comparison to an actual religion is the Dream. The Dream is what the Ansharin teach to one another, it is as sacred as a religious scripture to them. The Dream is what they celebrate with prayer, ceremonies and days of festivities. It is not their God, but their history, which in their eyes is what truly deserves to be celebrated. And while many do believe that without the grace of Kedalup, the Dream wouldn't exist, they are two separate entities that are of equal importance to the Ansharin.
I will gladly do my best to explain it further, though there isn't really much to explain. Kedalup isn't really a traditional deity, and it's certainly not one that is recognised throughout Eden or even the Dreamscape. No, Kedalup is an Ansharin belief only. Kedalup is what the Ansharin call the world. While most of the other civilisations scattered across the world would refer to it as Eden; the Ansharin call it Kedalup.
Kedalup is also their 'God' in a sense because the Ansharin are a tribe who live off the land. The land is what gives them their crops, their water, their livestock; it keeps them alive. Without the land, Kedalup, the Ansharin would perish. For this reason the Ansharin have a very spiritual respect towards the land and recognise it as their God; the one that gives them life. There are no religious practices that the Ansharin perform to worship Kedalup, it isn't that kind of religion. The key principle of the Ansharin people is to take the gifts that Kedalup grants them in exchange for respecting the land.
A more appropriate comparison to an actual religion is the Dream. The Dream is what the Ansharin teach to one another, it is as sacred as a religious scripture to them. The Dream is what they celebrate with prayer, ceremonies and days of festivities. It is not their God, but their history, which in their eyes is what truly deserves to be celebrated. And while many do believe that without the grace of Kedalup, the Dream wouldn't exist, they are two separate entities that are of equal importance to the Ansharin.