Templism: A New European Paganism
#1
I have posted in a number of other places about Templism, a unique neo-pagan religious creed which reconciles itself with Christianity as well as other traditional Western religions and traditionalist new Western religions. Yet, as compared to any of these, Templism itself is optimally sensible, enlightening, suited to modernity, and does not require (though it may optionally involve) the suspension of the intellect to believe.

It has already been written about, to the extent that I do not need to describe it here. Below is a post which succinctly describes the doctrine, the link for which takes you to the canonical text of Templism, Templist Canon.

https://templism.substack.com/p/15-tenets-of-templism

For those shy about what they click, simply looking up "Templist Canon" on Substack or a search engine should work as well.
#2
Hello Author. We follow each other on twitter. Read through your article and the Becoming a Templist one. Have to say I'm not very impressed by your religion, but I am impressed by your attitude, for instance, when you mention how you don't really believe what you write, and how a new Templist will be in awe of you. Very very based.

The actual belief system just seems like a religious club where you can believe almost whatever you want as long as you hold to some principles. It's not so well thought out. 

The trials are a little lacking in the difficulty department. I think I accomplished about half of them this week, by accident. I even do the trial of stillness every night. If you want to make these a challenge, I would make some changes. (If you do think these are all very difficult challenges, then I seriously doubt your competence as a human.)

Good luck!
#3
(06-21-2022, 10:08 PM)skorr Wrote: The actual belief system just seems like a religious club where you can believe almost whatever you want as long as you hold to some principles. It's not so well thought out.

I reckon you did not read so much of it, as the remainder of the doctrine is terribly specific. A Templist must be, for example, an immanent realist, an empiricist, a presentist. The idea of elitist pragmatism does not mean that a person may believe almost whatever they want as long as they hold to some principles and still call themselves a Templist, but that they may believe almost whatever they want as long as they hold to some principles.

(06-21-2022, 10:08 PM)skorr Wrote: The trials are a little lacking in the difficulty department. I think I accomplished about half of them this week, by accident. I even do the trial of stillness every night. If you want to make these a challenge, I would make some changes. (If you do think these are all very difficult challenges, then I seriously doubt your competence as a human.)

The point of the trials is not difficulty for the sake of difficulty, but selection; the Templist should be a certain kind of person, and these trials ensure that they are a certain kind of person. This includes, by the way, the kind of person who is creative enough to perceive that he has technically satisfied most of the trials within a week's time. Although, the trials are only necessary for adults who were not initiated as children, so the point is that the "Templist vanguard", if you will, be a certain kind of person.

Difficulty for the sake of difficulty would be suitable for building a secret society or something, but it is prohibitive for obvious reasons if I want to gain many followers, as I do.
#4
"Optimally", "suitably", "does not require."
Were you inspired by the divine when you wrote these articles, or not?
Any religion designed in a lab to meet certain criteria to fit a specific purpose is not a 'religion'. No one can truly believe in such a thing unless they were brought up in it.
I know it's a favourite pastime of autists to design their idiosyncratic belief systems, but uninspired spiritualities will not catch on with the wider public, even if forced (e.g. the quasi-worship of Lenin, Marx and others in the Soviet Union, and the rituals around that which could qualify as a 'religion'.)
#5
>Here Jesus defends traditional wisdom, absolute respect towards one’s parents, against the doctrine of the Pharisees. As Christianity was, for a time, to become the predominant religion of the Germanic peoples, some fundamental aspects of traditional wisdom must have been maintained by Wotan, or else the Germanic peoples would be driven to complete degeneracy.

>Here, combined with the previous passages that this passage is in the context of, you have perhaps the greatest repudiation of the truthfulness of Christianity. Jesus foretells the end of heaven (i.e the sky) and earth during the generation of those he speaks to. In the early history of Christianity, all Christians thought the end times to be imminent. When no such thing occurred, they had to adapt. This lie was told in order to amplify the attractiveness of the religion, and to increase the boldness of the early Christians, who really felt as if they had nothing to lose in this life, for everything would soon end. Thus were martyrs motivated.

the issues with simultaneously adhering to both of the above interpretations will seem clear to the reader, I hope.

https://templism.substack.com/p/commentaries-on-mark

>Acts 4:32

>Thus is degenerate egalitarianism a part of Christian precedent, and one of the reasons why Christianity is imperfect. It is good when Christians misinterpret their doctrine to exclude this idea, but the precedent is always there, always able to be recognized and exploited when desired.

*yawn*
#6
(06-22-2022, 12:58 AM)Verl Wrote: "Optimally", "suitably", "does not require."
Were you inspired by the divine when you wrote these articles, or not?
Any religion designed in a lab to meet certain criteria to fit a specific purpose is not a 'religion'. No one can truly believe in such a thing unless they were brought up in it.
I know it's a favourite pastime of autists to design their idiosyncratic belief systems, but uninspired spiritualities will not catch on with the wider public, even if forced (e.g. the quasi-worship of Lenin, Marx and others in the Soviet Union, and the rituals around that which could qualify as a 'religion'.)

-No one can truly believe in such a thing unless they were brought up in it.

How does any religion begin, then?

Since it seems that you need me to be, yes, I was and I am inspired by the gods to write all of these articles. Why, do you suppose that the gods prefer the sub-optimal, the unsuitable, the unnecessary? Of course they don't.

(06-22-2022, 05:23 AM)Guest Wrote: >Here Jesus defends traditional wisdom, absolute respect towards one’s parents, against the doctrine of the Pharisees. As Christianity was, for a time, to become the predominant religion of the Germanic peoples, some fundamental aspects of traditional wisdom must have been maintained by Wotan, or else the Germanic peoples would be driven to complete degeneracy.

>Here, combined with the previous passages that this passage is in the context of, you have perhaps the greatest repudiation of the truthfulness of Christianity. Jesus foretells the end of heaven (i.e the sky) and earth during the generation of those he speaks to. In the early history of Christianity, all Christians thought the end times to be imminent. When no such thing occurred, they had to adapt. This lie was told in order to amplify the attractiveness of the religion, and to increase the boldness of the early Christians, who really felt as if they had nothing to lose in this life, for everything would soon end. Thus were martyrs motivated.

the issues with simultaneously adhering to both of the above interpretations will seem clear to the reader, I hope.

https://templism.substack.com/p/commentaries-on-mark


Not clear to me. It is also not clear to me what point you are making. Are you saying that, as both are examples of traditional wisdom, and I affirm one while rejecting the other, that this is contradictory? If so, you will see in the first statement that I speak about some fundamental aspects of traditional wisdom, not the Jewish tradition in entirety. To repudiate certain aspects of it is not a contradiction.

Or, do you suppose that being bold and a martyr is an example of degeneracy? It depends what it is for. For a useless cause, it is suicide, and suicide is degenerate. For a useful cause, it is sacrifice, and sacrifice is not degenerate. Christianity was a useful cause, and still is.
#7
This is essentially what Jim believes in. "Gnon".
#8
"Immanent realism, empiricism, presentism. Alright, looks good to go."

"You need a Great Prophet to start a religion!"

"What do you mean you don't like my religion? What if I try taking out the pragmatic elitism?"

"You need a Great Prophet to start a religion!"

"Mmm... 💢💢💢"
#9
(06-24-2022, 01:06 AM)Fra Longino Wrote: Religion is not a mental game one plays to find the Prisca Theologica of basedness. It requires revelation. I want OP to go into a cave completely separated from Civilization and do nothing but say the name of Jesus over and over again while subsisting on nothing but a slice of bread a day and water for an entire month and then come back and see if any of this makes sense.

Perhaps God will speak to you and confirm the veracity of your claims. Perhaps not. If the latter, it's probably for the best that you leave these matters for the elect.


Agreed. Faith comes from the soul, not the brain. It's the reason why Default-Anglo-American zoomies always fail on their faith as le based ordodox or gadolig. They didn't have God speak to them, they just chose that denomination because it was "based".
#10
(06-24-2022, 01:06 AM)Fra Longino Wrote: Religion is not a mental game one plays to find the Prisca Theologica of basedness. It requires revelation. I want OP to go into a cave completely separated from Civilization and do nothing but say the name of Jesus over and over again while subsisting on nothing but a slice of bread a day and water for an entire month and then come back and see if any of this makes sense.

Perhaps God will speak to you and confirm the veracity of your claims. Perhaps not. If the latter, it's probably for the best that you leave these matters for the elect.

What you read, was it true or untrue, useful in some way or not useful, and why?

If unable to ask yourself these questions, but instead focused on petty genetic fallacies, alright:

I used my time off work to drive to Ettenberg, Berchtesgadener Land, where it is said that in 1238, the goddess "Isais" appeared to German knights of the Knight's Templar, led by Hubertus Koch. Koch and a number of his men had been instructed in an earlier apparition of Isais, while passing near what is Nineveh in modern day Iraq, to repair to the Untersberg mountain, and to build a house. This they did at Ettenberg. Indeed, a command post was erected here. There they were told, among other things (concerning the holy grail, for example), that Jesus was Wotan, and that Wotan now sleeps in the Untersberg mountain, where he will awaken when his people need him (which is now commonly known Untersberg folklore).

There is an inn in Ettenberg where I could stay. I pondered what to do, as in truth I did not have any plans in advance. I wandered through the woods near the town. There is a stream there, and a waterfall, and it is quite nice, but nothing happened. I resolved to quit the inn, to take my camping gear that I had brought, and to camp in the nearby woods in solitude. This I did for three days, eating the rations I had brought, spending the hours in contemplation, enjoying the nature around me. It is remarkable how little bored I was, in such scenery, despite my inaction. Yet, on the second and third days I became very desirous of advancing to my goal, and so I spent much of the day willing for the gods to contact me, or to show me a sign - simply willing; thinking about the desired outcome. But nothing came. When it came time to sleep on the third day, having had no success, I willed strongly to be contacted in the dream state with a sign or a word, and I went to bed. My dreams were unremarkable.

I woke at night to relieve myself, and upon leaving my tent to find a suitable place, heard a raspy, echoing noise in the distance, which sounded as if (and most probably truly was) a spoken word by the forest itself: "es ist hier". So I went in its direction, finding an unusually large tree. I searched around that tree, and found a carving, which read: "dummkopf", and included a drawing of a mountain. Probably scribbled by some delinquent.

Yes...of course, I was going to ascend Untersberg eventually anyway. I took this as a sign to immediately go there, and I packed everything. There are many paths to ascend from Ettenberg, which is nice, because Ettenberg is east of the mountain, while the "normie entrance" is west of the mountain, so that I did not encounter any campers in the night. I climbed through the eerie nighttime wilderness, not tired at all or thirsty or hungry, though it is quite a distance, until I reached a large clearing beside the path, through which ran a stream. I was overcome suddenly with a strong thirst, and drinking from my canteen, found its contents not to be sufficient to quench it. I therefore ran instinctively to the stream, from which I could filter water, but found the water level so low and the ground below so hard as to make my canteen impossible to fill.

I proceeded with the frenzied, and not quite logical, resolution to "walk forward until I found water", leading me across the stream through a forest, where my thirst was only becoming worse. The wind began to howl tremendously, pushing the trees around violently, causing branches and sticks to fall and to blow around wildly. I feared that I may be gored with one, especially as, behind me and in front of me, the trees were at an incline above me. So I dashed through the forest, hoping to reach a clearing, which I did.

But unfortunately not in the way I hoped. Passing out of the trees, I had run into a steep rocky hill, causing me to tumble down it, hurting my knee. I was not assisted by the wind continuing to blow from my right side, so that I not only fell, but fell with force to the left, and was unable to regain my footing until I had tumbled down completely. To worsen my injury was the fact that the bottom of the hill culminated in a ravine with a stream, leading me to rush forward, heedless of my crippled state, until I collapsed by the side of the stream, unable to walk. I didn't care, having obtained the means to quench my thirst, I stuck my face into the water until it was satiated.

Having my senses back now, I realized that I could not move with any effectiveness, and that I was bleeding. Having set my pack down at the first stream, I didn't have any way to call for help, either, and I was still concerned about the wind. But just as I was worrying, I heard a noise behind me, and looking, saw two cloaked figures approaching me, who I called out to. They did not respond, but continued to approach me. I could not see their faces, but could tell that one was male, and the other female. They silently picked me up and carried me, for some time, through the mountain. I did not inquire or speak a word, as this seemed to be approaching something near enough to the mystical experience that I sought.

I feel that I must omit the intervening portion of the story, but to continue from it: in the blinding darkness, I felt myself set down upon a chair, where I remained in silence for a few moments. Then, startlingly, a hand touched my wounded knee, whence the pain stopped, and I later saw that it was completely healed. The hand retracted, and what seemed to be minutes, but was probably only seconds later, I heard a voice speak from the direction of my right ear, as if from a person standing close by it, and it said, in a calm and measured male voice, in a way that sounded beautiful enough to be a song, or a poem: "you have come to seek approval for that which you will do anyway".

Indeed, I had. I had already been working on the project of Templist Canon by this time, when it was still a PDF document that I intended to circulate as a "holy book", before realizing the utility of Substack. Indeed, I had gone to Untersberg only to seek a sign of approval for this project. Indeed, I would have continued even if no sign were given.
#11
(06-24-2022, 01:06 AM)Fra Longino Wrote: Religion is not a mental game one plays to find the Prisca Theologica of basedness. It requires revelation. I want OP to go into a cave completely separated from Civilization and do nothing but say the name of Jesus over and over again while subsisting on nothing but a slice of bread a day and water for an entire month and then come back and see if any of this makes sense.

Perhaps God will speak to you and confirm the veracity of your claims. Perhaps not. If the latter, it's probably for the best that you leave these matters for the elect.

[Image: 019.jpg]
#12
(06-24-2022, 10:02 AM)The_Author Wrote: Yes...of course, I was going to ascend Untersberg eventually anyway. I took this as a sign to immediately go there, and I packed everything. There are many paths to ascend from Ettenberg, which is nice

Which is nice mentioned
#13
"Why did he delete his posts? We're just funposting..."
#14
(06-29-2022, 01:59 PM)BillyONare Wrote: "Why did he delete his posts? We're just funposting..."

OVERCOME BY THE POWER OF WOTAN
#15
I suggest venerating King Cobra JFS as the first retard shaman of templism.

[Image: qinc5e4txfo51.jpg?width=3840&format=pjpg...64d99c170f]As was custom in nordo-semitic pagan societies (Source: the movie midsommer from a few years ago)
I didn't read the thread btw
"We all feel that in the distant future many may be faced with problems which can be solved only by a superior race of human beings, a race destined to become master of all the other peoples and which will have at its disposal the means and resources of the whole world." - Adolf Hitler
#16
(06-24-2022, 01:15 AM)Verl Wrote: Agreed. Faith comes from the soul, not the brain. It's the reason why Default-Anglo-American zoomies always fail on their faith as le based ordodox or gadolig. They didn't have God speak to them, they just chose that denomination because it was "based".

It should be easy to convert you then: God told me that Templism was true.

Don't believe me?
#17
(07-05-2022, 09:45 PM)The_Author Wrote: Don't believe me?

I don't.
#18
You may have missed the point, which is: if any proclamation of a revelation from a god suffices for evidence of the truth of a certain doctrine, Templist must be true, for I too can easily generate such a proclamation, and I actually do so.

As to your unbelief in general: you will never enjoy the benefits from the gods that a Templist enjoys, nor, probably, will you behave correctly so as to maximize the quality of your next incarnation, without the guidance of the true modern word of the gods.
#19
(08-16-2022, 05:42 PM)The_Author Wrote: As to your unbelief in general: you will never enjoy the benefits from the gods that a Templist enjoys, nor, probably, will you behave correctly so as to maximize the quality of your next incarnation, without the guidance of the true modern word of the gods.
In other words: YWNBAT (You Will Never Be A Templist).

I Welcome Amarna as the first (online) temple of the religion, in a sense this forum is a primer for the Great Forum of Templism that will arise in the future. I walk through the streets and forests of my city everyday anticipating my encounter with Balder (God of Initiation for Germanic aryans such as myself), who will begin my rites of trial into the Templist faith. After this, I will become Wotan's champion and will use whatever power he gives me to purify the world. Loving Kindness + Total Nigger Death.
#20
(08-16-2022, 09:41 PM)Leverkühn Wrote: In other words: YWNBAT (You Will Never Be A Templist).

Such memes advance the cause of the gods greatly, as it seems that all unpopular opinions online must originate as jokes. For, per the wisdom of the gods, NPCs believe whatever is made to occupy their minds. Jokes are allowed to occupy the mind with little resistance.

One who WNBAT will not enjoy the glory of the coming aristocratic age, will not be thought of as having invested in its success. He will not have been there when, having trained their bodies via the Trial of the Physique, the Trial of Combat, and the Crypto-Templist stage of the Polemarch, Templized Britons worshiping Wotan used their Talismans for Courage, granted to them by religious exemption of the UK, to defend themselves against the rival tribe of virtue of the Somali gangs of London, thus bringing about Partial Nigger Death.

Though many do not know it yet, YNGMI is the very same YWNBAT. If YWNBAT then Y are simply NGMI. Such a person will associate at best with some loosely defined, uninspired, corpus of based thought, or brain-dead corpus of Christian thought. He is destined never to accomplish anything, and he is probably gay.



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