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6/15/2025, 8:38:16 AM
>>527490318 (me)
I really hope that the story of the grand inquisitor is adapted into Limbus, as well. The ideals of the Grand Inquisitor both fit with the themes of Limbus, very much -- that humanity should be bound that they can be free of 'sin', and that some people must willingly damn themselves to hell in order that they can FORCE the others to be saved in heaven (In other words, by committing the unforgivable that others do not have the choice to sin, is it justifiable) and really stuck with me because for the longest time I placed myself in a small version of that altar.
But as Zosimov says (and the actual teachings of the church that Dosto references), if you were to go into these things expecting reward, it would have been better to not have done them at all. There was a story about a monk that fasted for 15 years, not eating any meat. He told his elder about it, and his elder said, 'you may as well have, because it was all for nothing now'.
>>527490517
I hate you
I really hope that the story of the grand inquisitor is adapted into Limbus, as well. The ideals of the Grand Inquisitor both fit with the themes of Limbus, very much -- that humanity should be bound that they can be free of 'sin', and that some people must willingly damn themselves to hell in order that they can FORCE the others to be saved in heaven (In other words, by committing the unforgivable that others do not have the choice to sin, is it justifiable) and really stuck with me because for the longest time I placed myself in a small version of that altar.
But as Zosimov says (and the actual teachings of the church that Dosto references), if you were to go into these things expecting reward, it would have been better to not have done them at all. There was a story about a monk that fasted for 15 years, not eating any meat. He told his elder about it, and his elder said, 'you may as well have, because it was all for nothing now'.
>>527490517
I hate you
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