Order of Accendo

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the symbol of Chaos, with multiple spokes showing the different choices in life and how their actions can set one in completly different directions

Literally translating as "enlightenment" (Greek, "accendiko", "accendikus"), the Order of Accendo is a chaos-based organization, occasionally referred to as a cult, but attracting few enough members to need no official caucus to establish it as a religion.[1]

Contents

[edit] Origins

The Order of Accendo is often considered to be a "spin-off" from Discordianism, a cult-philosophy that was established by Malaclypse the Youngster[2]. All of Malaclypse's personal beliefs and experiences were recorded in the Discordian holy book, the Principia Discordia. Those who follow the Order of Accendo, however, show many of the factors of Discordian lifesyles in themselves: a modernized chaos-centered cult that seems to attempt to preserve Greek mythology in the form of paganism, with their chief matron being Eris, the Goddess of Discord (hence her philosophy's name, [[Discordianism]]). Malaclypse wrote his Principia Discordia in circa 1958 or 1959, although it is unsure the exact original time period from which the Order of Accendo arrived.[3].

[edit] Purpose

The Order of Accendo appears to have a rather shifted outlook on life. Those within the Order seem to see the advocation of chaos more productive than that of law - allowing, for example, scientists to continue "questionable" research with impunity, but yielding results both immoral and beneficial[4]. Some of their other beliefs revolve around the fact that they think that the power of change, revolution, and alteration (considered to be the chaos factor in the Order) becomes more effective in helping the world if there is a greater amount of it; thus, the Order of Accendo sees life as the more chaos, the better. They also follow a unique lifestyle that holds a cultic ideal: by creating enough chaos, the world will eventually fall; once it is dead, though, we can bring it back, better, aware of our past mistakes and failures. Those within the Order of Accendo appear to cherish the idea of destroying the earth and restoring, and such a philosophy may simply been a twist on Erisians and Discordianism, thrown together with logic, faith, and the such[5].

[edit] Deity

The Order of Accendo varies greatly as they do not have a designated god or goddess to run their organization. Discordianists, however, revere Chaos, and Eris, either as a goddess herself or simply as a name for the chaos which they try to promote. Other Order members may follow Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism - any religion can go hand-in-hand with the Order of Accendo, as it is not a religion in itself, merely a group of like-minded induviduals who appreciate the need for change[6][7].

[edit] References

  1. ^ Google translator
  2. ^ Principia Discordia, Malaclypse the Youngster
  3. ^ "it should on no account be taken seriously but is far more serious than most jokes" and "See … [also] ha ha only serious" The Jargon File v4.4.7 but present at least as far back as v4.0.0, (1996, July 24); The entry for discordianism begins, "Somewhere between parody, social commentary, and religion…" Rabinovitch, Shelly & Lewis, James. The Encyclopedia of Modern Witchcraft and Neo-Paganism". Pp 75–76. Citadel Press. 2002. ISBN 0806524065; "These organisations [Discordianism & The Church of the Subgenius] are just two of a whole raft of mock religions…" Phillips, M. (2004, Sept. 14). Wizards of ID cook up divine pile of spaghetti bolognese. The West Australian, p. Metro 18; "The explosion of the American counter-culture and the revival of surrealism met Discordianism (1960's and 70's) and the result was a Neo-Pagan parody religion of mirth and laughter." (p. 3) E. K. Discorida. (2005). The Book of Eris. Synaptyclypse Generator
  4. ^ Rick Strassman. Chapter Summaries for DMT: The Spirit Molecule. Retrieved on 2008-02-25
  5. ^ Rabinovitch, Shelly & Lewis, James. The Encyclopedia of Modern Witchcraft and Neo-Paganism". Pp 75–76. Citadel Press. 2002. ISBN 0806524065
  6. ^ Rabinovitch, Shelly & Lewis, James. The Encyclopedia of Modern Witchcraft and Neo-Paganism". Pp 75–76. Citadel Press. 2002. ISBN 0806524065
  7. ^ Paratheo-Anametamystikhood Of Eris Esoteric (POEE), a Non-prophet Irreligious Disorganisation