[@Dead Cruiser] I can dig it! Good to see you back. Here are all of the in-world religions to make writing that sheet a little easier. The Holy Path - The kami are spirits innately tied to Tsukishima, particularly its natural landscape, although places and items that have existed for a century are imbued with spirits as well. These kami have Tsukishima's best interest at heart. When Mt. Kaji erupted a few hundred years ago, that was the kami getting mad at people for focusing on their material lives and not spirituality. The Holy Path has priests and priestesses that attend to their shrines, who can marry and have children. The Sacred Path - The Enlightened One was born of a virgin princess in Seung Yua, but was abandoned and carried to Tsukishima safely on a raft protected by the ocean kami. There, he was raised by peasants before learning about the circumstances of his adoption, sailing to Seung Yua, and meeting his Queen mother, who welcomed him with open arms. After being a prince for a while, he was dissatisfied with the manner peasants were treated and fled the palace, meditating deep within Seung Yua's jungle for a year with no food or water. When he emerged, he was enlightened -- He walked back to Tsukishima along the water's surface to spread his teachings, and then walked to Mt. Kaji with his followers who built his first temple. The Sacred Path has monks, who cannot marry or have children. Mt. Kaji itself has warrior monks and is technically neutral in political regards within the empire. The Divine Path - The first religion of Seung Yua, following a pantheon of many spirits similar to the Tsukihito kami, but with over a thousand spirits to its name. A devout mother praying for her son's safe return from a sea voyage might pray to the ocean spirit, but would more likely pray -- for better results -- to the spirit in charge of safely ferrying sailors home, or perhaps even the [i]more[/i] specific spirit of safely ferrying the sailors home to their mothers in time for a specific religious holiday. What little of the Divine Path known to Tsukihito is often mocked for the peculiar elephant gods and many-armed spirits as well as their extremely varied pantheon of spirits. The Heavenly Path - Somewhere west of Goristan, a man named Yeshua who claimed to be the son of God preached a gospel of loving one's neighbor and turning the other cheek. The emperor of the lands he was in responded to this blasphemy by killing him and nailing his body to a stump. In the morning, his body was gone and the stump was a tree, proving Yeshua's divinity to his followers and confirming his gospel's righteousness. The Divine Path has both priests and monks, though the differences are not accurately known this far from its origin. Some texts say Heavenly priests can marry and their monks cannot, while others claim that neither can marry. This is due to the Heavenly Path being split up into different regional factions, with one following a figurehead who claims to speak to Yeshua and God directly, and another believing their divinity to be too great to consort with any mortal man.