Tropedia

  • Before making a single edit, Tropedia EXPECTS our site policy and manual of style to be followed. Failure to do so may result in deletion of contributions and blocks of users who refuse to learn to do so. Our policies can be reviewed here.
  • All images MUST now have proper attribution, those who neglect to assign at least the "fair use" licensing to an image may have it deleted. All new pages should use the preloadable templates feature on the edit page to add the appropriate basic page markup. Pages that don't do this will be subject to deletion, with or without explanation.
  • All new trope pages will be made with the "Trope Workshop" found on the "Troper Tools" menu and worked on until they have at least three examples. The Trope workshop specific templates can then be removed and it will be regarded as a regular trope page after being moved to the Main namespace. THIS SHOULD BE WORKING NOW, REPORT ANY ISSUES TO Janna2000, SelfCloak or RRabbit42. DON'T MAKE PAGES MANUALLY UNLESS A TEMPLATE IS BROKEN, AND REPORT IT THAT IS THE CASE. PAGES WILL BE DELETED OTHERWISE IF THEY ARE MISSING BASIC MARKUP.

READ MORE

Tropedia
Register
Advertisement
WikEd fancyquotesQuotesBug-silkHeadscratchersIcons-mini-icon extensionPlaying WithUseful NotesMagnifierAnalysisPhoto linkImage LinksHaiku-wide-iconHaikuLaconic
File:Crystaldragonjesuschurch.jpg

"Our Father, who wields an axe, hallowed be thy name..."

Cquote1
"Not the regular Jesus, but one of the several space ones."
Cquote2


Any fictional religion, such as those found in a Medieval European Fantasy, which possesses attributes stereotypically associated with Christianity (especially Roman Catholicism) — such as priestly vestments, nuns and their habits, confessionals, the designs of houses of worship, and crosses—but which centers on a deity other than the Christian God, like an animistic spirit or pagan-flavored god. Often there will be a Yahweh analog but not a Jesus one. There may also be a Satan analog.

In numerous cases, in order to finalize the separation, the deity worshipped is a goddess. In these cases, she is usually just called "the Goddess." (This may be based off the common use by neo-pagan religions of this term to denote the main female deity.)

In anime, these substitutions are intended for local flavor more than specific evasive metaphors, considering the widespread idea that Nuns Are Mikos; the Jesus Taboo may be an exception, though. Western productions typically don't engage in this trope since they have to worry about offending someone; however, they may use Crystal Dragon Jesus as a satire on Christianity, in which case the offense is sometimes intended. They may also use it simply to use Middle Ages tropes without having to deal with Christianity directly. Also if one wants to use a religion that most people get the gist of, but want the setting to take place in a different world that isn't directly Earth (and thus it wouldn't make sense for the real Christianity, or any other of the Earth religions to exist), this trope is useful.

The name itself is a bit of a Dead Unicorn Trope, as few writers are quite willing to literally use a Crystal Dragon, but it does get the idea of random in-universe creatures and new-age crystals do everything belief as a Christ figure idea across.

Compare: Anime Catholicism, Hijacked by Jesus, Faux Symbolism, Interfaith Smoothie, King of All Cosmos, Fantasy Pantheon. See also You Mean "Xmas" and God of Evil. Not to be confused with Fantasy Counterpart Culture Christianity; a key element of Crystal Dragon Jesus is that it keeps the trappings of Christianity but substitutes a markedly different being in the deity's role. Sometimes it might occur alongside God Is Evil, especially if the work is meant to be a critique of Christianity. Is usually the center of a Physical Religion.

This trope might be tied to The Force, or else be a Path of Inspiration but it's always A Good Name for a Rock Band.

Examples of Crystal Dragon Jesus include:


Anime & Manga[]

  • Hidan in Naruto worships a god named Jashin who's creed is "Thou shalt kill thy neighbor." He does this by using himself as a voodoo doll. His death inflicts judgement on others. Except that he's immortal, so he actually makes it out alive. He can also walk on water, but that's normal in Naruto.
  • Averted in One Piece: God Eneru of Skypeia can hear (literally) everything on the whole (sky) island, and thanks to his power as lightning incarnate, he can smite the people that insult or disobey him, and all of his subjects fear him like an actual god—but then Gan Fall, Skypeia's former ruler, says that the title "god" is simply that: a title for Skypeia's ruler. Turns out Eneru is just out of his gourd.
  • The false religion practiced by Father Cornello in Fullmetal Alchemist incorporates many aspects of Roman Catholicism. This is especially noteworthy because, in later episodes of the 2003 anime version, it is revealed that Christianity itself is a dead religion; the show implies the timelines of the fictional universe and "our" universe split about a millennium in the past, around the time alchemy is discovered.
    • The Ishvalan religion seems to qualify as Crystal Dragon Islam. The Ishvalans have a vaguely Middle Eastern feel, and they are monotheists who worship a deity called Ishvalah, which sounds a lot like Allah (as well as Ishvala, the Sanskrit word for "god", so it could be coincidental).
      • Word of God says that they're essentially what would happen if the indigenous Ainu settled in a Middle Eastern environment.
  • In Trigun, there is a character, Wolfwood, who certainly dresses the way we'd expect a Protestant pastor to dress, and he does things like listen to confessions. There is a fair amount of analysis of the conflict between pacifist ideals and the obligation he feels to protect the innocent even if he must kill in order to do so. The major departure is the standard ludicrous weapon given to most characters; in Wolfwood's case, an allegedly portable pistol armory in the shape of a 7-foot tall cross, which he jokes is heavy because it's "full of mercy".
    • In the anime version, it's revealed that the various Christian/Protestant trappings are more a disguise/mockery than anything else, as Wolfwood is intended to be the next Chapel of the Church of the Gung-ho Guns, implicitly a cult religion created by Knives for the purpose of paying homage to him. Given this is Knives we're talking about, it wouldn't be that out of character.
  • The church of Mauser in Scrapped Princess has many of the Christian trappings, with a fair amount of local color.
  • In Record of Lodoss War, the archetypal High Fantasy anime, priests and paladins can be seen wearing crosses on their vestments/armor—even if they worship separate gods.
    • The losely connected spinoff Rune Soldier heavily features the Church of Mylee, which closely resembles a crusader order, except that it's exclusively female. (Male priests of Mylee play an important part in Lodoss War as well, it's possible that there are separate orders for men and women, though there is no rule of celibacy.)
  • In Those Who Hunt Elves, the holy symbol of Elvish priests looks an awful lot like a Greek Orthodox cross. There are also at least a few small, rather Christian-esque churches (including stained glass windows!) which may have only a single Roman Catholic-ish-looking priest and/or nun as staff, though the holy symbol seems to be more of a capital X in a circle for these. As of episode 9, there's not a whole lot of theology being discussed, though.
    • Of course, given the ending of season one wherein the two universes are merging, this might be an aversion; that could really be 'real' Christianity leaking through.
  • The Saint Church of Ancient Belka in Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha even has Jesus and Shroud of Turin analogues. The main character then adopts (Clone) Jesus by the end of the third season.
  • The Holy See religious order of Berserk is a full on Catholic Church approximation, complete with the Pope, bishops, and the Inquisition. It is also strongly hinted at that they actually worship the Godhand instead of the Four Elemental Kings, with shots of branded skeletons and Mozgus' story suggesting that the dungeon-cum-inquisition tower was rebuilt as an homage to Void's rise to the Godhand, and The Pope recognizing Griffith as the "Risen Savior".
    • Chapter 83, the so-called "Lost Chapter," was never reprinted at the author's request because it supposedly gave too much of the story away too quickly. If you accept it as canon, you'll see that the symbol used by the Holy See wherever you would normally see a cross or crucifix in Catholicism is actually a stylized representation of the Idea of Evil, also known as the God of the Abyss and the "ungodly god born of man", a powerful creation of mankind's collective unconscious whose sole purpose is to cause pain and suffering so that humanity has someone else to blame for their problems.
  • In Slayers, there's a literal dragon-worshiping church with suspiciously cross-like sunburst symbols and temples that tend to look rather Catholic. Their god Ceiphed sacrificed himself to save the world, too, and left behind four elemental dragon gods. Large factions of the church tend to have extremist policies about what's right in saving the world.
  • In Haunted Junction, Haruto Hojo is selected to be one of the three members of the Holy Student Council (the others being a Shinto miko and the son of a Buddhist monk) because his father is a Christian priest. The denomination is extremely vague... the priest's vestments are similar to a Jesuit's robes but in all white, he can marry and have a family, has the icons in his church that bear a strong resemblance to the Virgin Mary, and is skilled in the ways of Hermetic Magic with no qualms about teaching his son enough to make a spirit trapping spell. (Note that some rites in the Catholic Church allow priests to marry; just not the Latin rite, which is the largest. I doubt that was what was intended, though.)
  • In 07-Ghost, the Church is identical to the Roman Catholic church (pre-schisms), right down to its relationship with the secular government, except that in addition to God, they worship seven 'ghosts' that are more like crosses between saints and angels.
  • Shoujo Kakumei Utena toys with this trope. The series' deity is Dios, a literal prince on a white horse, who occasionally comes down from the heavens to give Utena his strength. The antagonist is Akio ("Morning Star", as in, Satan), who clearly defines himself as Dios' evil counterpart. It turns out they were once the same person who was worshiped as a god in medieval society, but were unable to listen to everyone's prayers and fulfill their duties as a deity. His sister Anthy took the blame and was symbolically crucified as a Jesus-figure, and they feel the pain of her punishment to this day, but are absolving the people of their sins.
  • In Space Adventure Cobra, the signature character (Cobra himself) goes to church to pray for the life of a badly wounded ally. He delivers a rather half-assed personal talk with God, professes that it's completely out of his character and ends by telling the holy image that he leaves the rest up to him (God), since He is clearly more qualified in the whole causing miracles department. What makes it qualify for this trope in a somewhat hilarious fashion is that the obviously Christian crucifix is mounted upside-down.
    • The church in question was an abandoned wreck which had obviously fared poorly from years of disuse. The crucifix could possibly have fallen down and swung in reverse as a result of it's supports deteriorating.
  • The world of Claymore has a dominate religious order that resembles Catholicism, with priests, nuns, and even an entire holy city called Rabona, which forbides our local Amazon Brigade from entering since they are half demon and all. You know, EVIL. 'Course it doesn't stop the actual full-blooded demons from entering the city...


Comic Books[]

  • In Planet Hulk, the religion of Sakaar seems very... familiar. Particularly, their legends of Sakaarson and the Worldbreaker present a clear dichotomy resembling that between Christ and Antichrist. They also refer to "the prophet" as one to whom thanks should be given, indicating a figure similar to Muhammad, as well. Later, Axeman Bone would kill children of Shadow descent until he found the true Son of Hulk, Sakaarson, the savior.
    • Korg and the Kronans' faith is basically straight up Catholicism with the words changed, down to a Mad Libbed version of the Lord's Prayer; Being stone men, instead of asking their lord to forgive their sins, they ask that He forgive their cracks.
      • Which is missing a golden opportunity to create a pun with 'faults', which suffers from not being quite so obvious a joke.
  • Joe, a mysterious Tuskagee pilot, in Ghostopolis
  • There's also a lot of comparisons between Superman and Jesus Christ. Many authors intentionally try to make Kal-El fit this trope.


Fan Work[]

  • The authors of Cinnamon Bunzuh have dubbed the overtly mystical whale that Cassie can apparently communicate with "Jesus Whale," and claim that it is secretly responsible for all the ongoings of the book series.


Film[]

  • The Force is part this and part Eastern beliefs. The ins and outs of Forceism can be found in detail here; like so many things, it's become more complicated than Lucas could have possibly imagined.
    • The prophecy of the Chosen One fits this trope almost perfectly. Of course, what actually happens makes Luke more Christ-like, redeeming his father through his suffering and all. And knowing George Lucas, that's exactly where he was going with all the "hanging" imagery in Empire.
    • Lucas always claimed to be re-interpreting traditional forms of myth. But redeems his father is interesting because it is not standard Christianity but may well fit some Gnostic Christianity where the True Divinity is beyond comprehension using the normal intellect of the 'created' world and the 'creator' Jehovah is a kind of schizophrenic subpersonality or, in some versions, lesser deity that got away like the (corrupt) universe of its creation. A prayer (or meditation) attributed to Valentinus has the believer 'redeeming myself' from 'this Aion' (order of existence) through the Divine Incarnation (stereotypically in Jesus, but standing for in all of us in Gnostic belief) 'as did IAO', that is, the Greek version of 'YHWH'. So reversing the orthodox (and most other Gnostic!) belief that Jehovah's incarnation as Jesus 'redeemed' mankind, in the Valentinian view, Jehovah's incarnation as Jesus redeemed the demi-urge Jehovah by bringing him into awareness of the greater divine spark in humanity. I have heard devout Roman Catholics say something similar that "God understands us because he became one of us" - which raises the question of why experience was necessary for the Omniscient.
      • For further reading on this massive subject, consult the nonfiction book The Hero With a Thousand Faces, a study of Messiah and hero figures across cultures and history, the author of whom was consulted extensively by George Lucas when writing the original stories.
      • Also see The Power of Myth by the same author (Joseph Campbell). In it, Campbell mentions that the one thing that an omniscient, omnipresent being lacks is "limitation." Without limitations, such a being regards everything impartially; all things are equal and good. The only way it can understand human suffering (or experience any novelty at all) is to become a mortal and finite individual.
  • The original Planet of the Apes franchise twists the usual take in an uncommon way. There is an ape religion centered on a prophet-like figure, The Lawgiver, whose teachings are contained on the Sacred Scrolls, but the deity above him seems to be indistinguishable from the Abrahamaic God (outside of creating all apes equal and "in his own image", of course). Religion is also unified in an organized "church" that is one and the same with the political and judge class, and whose main interest is to keep other apes from learning that humans once dominated the planet. Tim Burton's "reimagined" version turns this 180 degrees and makes the apes followers of the outright divine Semos, "the giver and origin of all life", with the sacred ruins of Calima identified as the place where Semos started creation.


Literature[]

  • Omnianism, in the Discworld novels, is more of a parody of aspects of Christianity, but does worship Om as a bull or an eagle (or, later, a tortoise). More obliquely, in the novel Feet of Clay, Pratchett writes about a conflicting dead religion from the same region as Omnianism, which, given the fact that its "priests" make Golems, might be the Crystal Dragon Jesus version of Judaism. Omnians in later books have also picked up similar habits to Jehovas Witnesses and the Salvation Army.
    • Note that "Omnianism" could mean "Everythingism" (Latin, omnia) and the name of the Great God could be a back formation. So what? Well, since "catholic" means "universal", "catholicism" might be parsed as "everythingism" too. Not that Pterry is anything other than scrupulously even-handed over religion, of course.
      • Omnianism parodies different aspects of evangelical Christianity, specifically; in Small Gods, which takes place some considerable time before the rest of the series, it's very much parallel to the Crusades, being inclined to spread the good word by the sword and dealing rather harshly with heretics (and occasionally taking incredibly liberal definitions of "heresy"). Omnians who are chronologically post-Small Gods are much less violent, and superficially resemble Jehovah's Witnesses; the City Watch books frequently mention that Constable "Washpot" Visit-The-Ungodly-With-Explanatory-Pamphlets spends all his off hours trooping door-to-door through Ankh-Morpork trying to win converts.
      • The transition between the two states, changing from a singular evangelical state with autocratic rule to a constantly-schisming hodgepodge of different sects who all disagree on minor points of dogma and decorum, approximately references the breakoff of Protestant Christianity from Catholicism and its aftermath. On the Discworld, however, the expected centuries of persecution and religious civil war were prevented thanks to the reasonable approach of Brutha and the meddling of a time-traveller.
    • Interestingly, although the series' Klatchians are clearly Arabs, they are not explicitly linked with Islam other than through a few throwaway references to houris. This is because "Klatch" is both a country (that's half the mythical Araby and half the modern Middle East) and a continent which is basically a stand-in for Asia. The polytheistic religion of Klatch-the-country, complete with temples covered in erotic carvings, is closer to a Crystal Dragon Jesus version of Hinduism.
    • And the History Monks are Crystal Dragon Buddhism.
    • The church of Blind Io (a sort of Odin/Zeus expy) fills the spot of Church of England as the religion most pay lip service to, but no one gets all that excited about, including the priests.
    • Offlerism has some elements of Christianity, such as showing one temple having a collection for fixing the roof, a common phenomenon in old English churches, but the religion also has elements of Islam. It's particularly common in some parts of Klatch, and there's a throwaway reference to devout Offlerians avoiding alcohol. Riffing on Muslim and Jewish dietary laws, Offler forbids his followers from eating broccoli - which is easy to follow, since no one wants to eat broccoli anyway.
    • The deity Nuggan is basically intended to represent all that can be bad about a religion, and is an egomaniac who constantly imposes new prohibitions on his followers/declares new things to be abominations (in contrast to Offler, he prohibits things people would actually want to do). Nugganism was the state religion of Borogravia, a Ruritania with a Medieval Morons feel, although some readers have interpreted Borogravia under Nuggan is comparable to Afghanistan under the Taliban.
  • The Seven Realms Series gives us the Church of Mathus, which forbids the use of magic and considers wizards to be heretics, and two briefly mentioned beings known as the Maker and the Breaker. However, the Church doesn't generally play a major role in the series. They're essentially the by-product of ill-will towards wizards brought about by the Demon King, a wizard that nearly destroyed the world a thousand years before the start of the series.
  • Averted in the Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn novels by Tad Williams, in which the religion of Usires Aedon is clearly Christianity with the proper names search-and-replaced (he was the avatar of god, he died nailed to a tree and arose, etc.), in keeping with the books' setting in a very overt Fantasy Counterpart Culture of Medieval Europe.
    • This is a good illustration of the difference between Crystal Dragon Jesus and Fantasy Counterpart Culture Christianity. Because Usires Aedon is Jesus with the serial number filed off, he cannot be considered a Crystal Dragon Jesus, which is when you have a deity who is clearly not Jesus in charge of a pseudo-Christian religion.
  • The Earthsea novel, The Tombs of Atuan, might qualify, as it presents a Caucasian race with temple priestesses who dress essentially as nuns and their religion is strongly opposed to witchcraft. In this case though, they are actually worshiping evil spirits demanding human sacrifice and the wizards are the good ones of the series. Arguably, this was a subtle way of stating that God Is Evil.
    • The comparison here is dubious at best; beyond the virgin priestesses and the opposition to witchcraft, both of which are elements common to any number of real-world religions, the religion of the Nameless Ones bears no resemblance to Christianity.
  • The Elene church in David (and Leigh) Eddings' Elenium and Tamuli trilogy is a Catholic substitute. There is no direct proxy for Jesus himself, though.
    • Understandably. With no Jesus proxy around, David Eddings is thereby free to parody the hell out of dogma by making the Elene Church a massively complex and encroaching institution worshiping an aloof and distant sort of god (well, by comparison to the panoply of present gods in the books). One of the gods actually complains about the fact the Elene God is a crotchety old bugger obsessed with making up rules.
    • Mind you, that's the worst thing she has to say about him, and they seem to have a decent working relationship. The religious hatred among their human followers was the followers' own idea. But hey, that's better than said followers' real-world counterparts, who worship the same god.
    • Parallels exist for other religions as well. The Eshandist Heresy, an early offshoot of Eleneism, is located in a region that is reflective of the Arab region, and its leaders are compared in an unsavory way to Islamic prophets. On the neighboring continent, an offshoot of Eleneism is similar to Protestantism in its rejection of the central authority. And the Styrics have many common traits with Jews: largely without a homeland, persecuted and frequently slaughtered by Elenes for no very good reason, eschew eating pork. However, their actual theology is polytheistic, and their relationship with their gods is more personal than that of Judaism.
  • A Song of Ice and Fire
    • The Faith of the Seven is closely modeled after Roman Catholicism, except they worship seven aspects instead of a Holy Trinity: the Father, Mother, Warrior, Maid, Smith, Crone, and Stranger. The faith has monastic orders, dormant military orders, and a Pope (the High Septon). It's the official religion of the Seven Kingdoms, supplanting the pagan religion of the "old gods", much like Christianity did throughout Europe. The Faith is also the only religion invested in chivalry and knightly traditions.
    • The worship of the Old Gods frequently invokes shades of various druidic and pagan faiths of pre-Christian Europe.
    • The worship of R'hllor bears a great similarity to Zoroastrianism, with two diametrically opposed but equally powerful deities locked in conflict.
    • The faith of the Drowned God in the Iron Islands is very much akin to Christianity in different ways than the Faith of the Seven, being based around a god who died and came back to life, with the most important ritual being immersion in water (literal drowning and resuscitation, at least for those entering the priesthood). It's a strictly monotheistic religion which features a Satan-like adversary call the Storm God. It's also got a dash of Cthulhu Mythos added for extra creepiness.
  • In the Dune novel series, located in a distant future of our own universe, the Orange Catholic (generally referred as the OC) is an echo of what used to be the Christianity on our planet. The O.C. Bible was a conglomeration of various historical religious texts, created in order to end religious disputes.
    • Paul would seem to be the Fremen's Crystal Dragon Muhammed... which is all the Bene Gesseret's fault for grafting their Kwizatz Haderach bits onto the Zensunni religion. Then he becomes everybody else's Crystal Dragon Muhammed via jihad.
  • What we've seen of the worship of Khersis in Tales of MU is very much like Christianity, except in a world where gods are known to speak to mortals, demons are real, and exorcism works. Considering the one passage from the Khersian holy book that's been referenced parallels the gospels directly and one creation myth says he was born of a great dragon from a crystal egg, he may be a literal "Crystal Dragon Jesus". We don't know if he has any dark secrets yet, but some of his followers are assholes.
  • Inverted in JRR Tolkien's book The Silmarillion. Eru (God) has a lot of similarities to the Christian deity (as to be expected from a Catholic author), but the way in which his creations worship him is very different from traditional Christian practice. There are very few ceremonies, only a couple per year. And worship is never carried out in buildings; indeed, temples and churches are associated with evil by worshippers of Eru. In Númenorean worship, only the King or Queen could speak to Eru directly and make (bloodless) offerings, and most prayers or hymns seen in the mythology are addressed to one of the Valar (who roughly correspond to archangels or pagan gods).
  • Averted in the The Chronicles of Narnia books. Aslan is Jesus, literally.
    • Also, there seems to be no religion or clergy in Narnia; rather, the emphasis is on one's personal relationship with Aslan.
  • Also, CS Lewis' The Space Trilogy (Out of the Silent Planet, Voyage to Venus / Perelandra and That Hideous Strength) averts this in a similar way; Maleldil the Young is clearly implied to be merely the name for Christ in the alien language, not a separate being.
  • The Church of The General's Civil Government bears a striking resemblance to Orthodox Christianity—at least so far as rites and church buildings go. It's even got inquisitors, known as "Viral Cleansers", and heretics for them to hunt.
    • That's because the main character is strongly based on the Byzantine general Belisarius and so is the Empire he serves. Amusingly, the Islamic culture to the southeast is a stand in for the pre-Islamic Persians.
  • In Nick Perumov's Keeper of the Swords series of fantasy novels, there is an evil Crystal Dragon Jesus called "The Saviour", who resembles actual Jesus very much. Creepy.
  • In The Wheel of Time, the organisation of the Aes Sedai is pretty much a gender flipped version of the Catholic Church, with novices, habits (white dresses and shawls), solemn oaths, a Pope expy complete with Great Schism, and various claims of working in the name of the Creator.
    • The Children of the Light, on the other hand, definitely resemble a merger between the Knights Templar and the Inquisition.
    • And Rand himself is born to a Maiden (though not a virgin), suffers wounds to his palms, takes a wound in the side from a staff (according to Tarot symbolism, iconographically the same as the Spear of Longinus), and is crowned king with the Crown of Swords aka the Laurel Crown (plants + sharp points = crown of thorns).
  • The Quintaglio Ascension trilogy features a species of intelligent Tyrannosaurs who worship a planet they call "The Face of God".
  • Charles Stross' ongoing The Merchant Princes Series features an alternate world in which the dominant church in Europe and eastern North America is a church that looks very similar to Roman Catholicism, is headquartered in Rome, but which worships Sky Father and Lightning Child—it is implied that, at one point, the pagan Vikings conquered Europe entirely and a syncretistic religion built on the skeleton of the Roman Church came about.
  • In Guy Gavriel Kay's novels The Lions of Al-Rassan, The Sarantine Mosaic, and The Last Light of the Sun, "Jaddites" play the role of Christians in a Fantasy Counterpart Culture of medieval Europe, despite the fact that Jad is a sun god.
    • It gets even more confusing, though. Belief in the Jaddite Christ figure, named Heladikos, is actually a heresy of Jaddism, being the rough fantasy counterpart of Arianism. Heladikos's story resembles that of Phaeton, the son of the Greek sun god Helios, who lost control of the chariot of the sun. Jad is more of a conflation of Helios and Jehovah, then, instead of a direct Christian analogue (and maybe some Apollo, too). Off to the side, you also have the Kindath (Jews) who worship the moons, and the Asharites (Muslims) who worship the stars. Everyone thinks everyone else's choice of veneration is insane, for various reasons.
  • The followers of Gird in The Deed of Paksenarrion. Gird's right-hand-man/saint/apostle was Luap, which is just Paul spelled backwards.
    • Somewhat averted, though, in that Gird is definitely a saint, not a god. And since different religions are popular in different regions and everyone acknowledges that there are many gods, you get many Church equivalents, each with its own Crystal Dragon Jesus type, that more or less coexist peacefully.
  • The cult of Daniel Christ (yes, the Old Testament Daniel) in Avram Davidson's The Phoenix and the Mirror.
  • Orson Scott Card's Alvin Maker is basically Joseph Smith plus magic.
  • The cult on the planet Pardal in David Weber 's book Heirs of Empire is this. What they're actually worshiping turns out to be a voice-activated ship's computer that's been on the planet for ages. "Initiating rite of Fire Test!" indeed.
  • Dexterity Jones in Karen Miller's Godspeaker Trilogy as well as the historical figure Rollin who was killed for his beliefs.
  • Could easily have been named for Irene Radford's Dragon Nimbus series; the plot takes place on a planet with transparent dragons, and the human inhabitants worship stranded space travelers who are themselves Christians.
  • In The Fionavar Tapestry, the king of the dwarves (and therefore the dwarven culture) is spiritually bound to a lake inhabited by a literal crystal dragon. It's not explicitly a deity, but it does decide whether the would-be king lives, dies, or goes crazy.
  • The Young Wizards series seems to suffer Crystal Dragon Jesus Mood Whiplash. In the beginning, the main deities of the universe seem to be the 'Powers that be', which are essentially Sufficiently Advanced Energy Beings, and not intrinsically above most creatures. Later in the series, the One is revealed - it created all things, has a terrible foe in the Lone Power, has the Powers (several of whom are archangels) working directly for it, and is the source of all life and good in the universe...
    • It's more a matter of the religious elements being more explored rather than newly added. The One is mentioned as the source of all life in the very first book (it's in the Wizard's Oath), but isn't talked about that much till later. The Powers being archangels and the like is mentioned in High Wizardry; the first unfallen Power the main characters meet says that it was Michael, Prometheus, Athene, and Thor.
      • Also in the first book, the Lone One talks on the phone to "Mike" - implied to be the Archangel Michael.
  • Stephen Hunt's Jackelian novels have Circlism, which is a strange take on the trope as it has the form of Anglicanism but it's substance is sort of Buddhist/pantheist.
  • Dragonlance has the church of Paladine, which greatly resembles medieval Catholicism. The followers of the gods of Light even have a "holy triad" of Paladine, Mishakal and Kiri-Jolith and a "sign of the triangle" that are very similar to the Holy Trinity and Sign of the Cross.
  • No Crystal Dragon Jesus in Kate Eliot's Crossroads trilogy but pretty much Crystal Dragon Everythingelse. Beltak, god of the Sirniakan Empire is a Crystal Dragon Allah, the Silvers' Hidden One is a Crystal Dragon Yahweh and the Merciful One of the Qin and the Golden Road nations they conquer is a Crystal Dragon Buddha.
  • Robert A. Heinlein's Stranger in A Strange Land is an extremely thinly-veiled allegory for the life of Jesus Christ, starring a beautiful blond human boy raised on Mars. He ends up starting his own cult and, in the end, is murdered by an angry mob and ascends to a higher plane of existence.
    • It's worth noting that it's explicitly stated at the end of the book that Martian-raised Michael Valentine Smith was the earthly avatar of the Archangel Michael.
  • Skirted in "The Longest Voyage" by Poul Anderson, where they worship the Daughter of God rather than the Son.
  • Wrapt in Crystal by Sharon Shinn postulates descendants of Earth colonies who have liberally mixed aspects of Catholicism with other stuff. They think of God as female, and one order of nuns are sacred prostitutes.
  • Mitra in Robert E. Howard's Conan the Barbarian stories is often portrayed this way. While Set isn't directly analogous to Satan, he is definitely the main evil god in that universe and Mitra's followers think of him as directly opposed to Mitra in ways other gods aren't.
    • It's Ibis who's directly opposed to Set, not Mitra. Both Ibis and Mitra have elements of Crystal Dragon Jesus, though not nearly as heavyhanded as some other examples on this page. They've both got overtones borrowed from other real-world religions (classical Egyptian polytheism in the case of Ibis, and the Persian soldier-cult of Mithras in the case of Mitra).
      • The very first Conan story features the ghost of a prophet of Mitra who battled Set, possibly on a personal level.
    • Mitra seems to have a lot more in common with Yahweh than Mithra, what with it preaching strict monotheism, belief in Heaven and Hell, missionaries and the oppression of the cult of Asura who come off as a fantasy take on Judaism.
  • In Kage Baker's House of the Stag, the Star, aka the Beloved, seems like a Green Elven Jesus, only it turns out he's more a Green Elven John the Baptist, preparing the way for the real deal: the Saint, aka The Green Witch, who is an actual star descended from the heavens.
  • In Sergey Lukyanenko's Seekers of the Sky duology, the setting is an Alternate Reality where Jesus was killed as a baby, forcing God to come up with a new plan. This time, he gets Mary and Joseph to adopt the one baby to survive the massacre. He becomes the Redeemer (no name is ever given) with the power to put any object or living being into another dimension (apparently, Hell). The resulting religion shares much with Christianity but has differences as well. For example, there's no Devil, and to speak of him is heresy of the highest kind. Hell is a frozen wasteland (making the well-known phrase irrelevant). The symbol of the Churches (there are two with one leader) is the Holy Pillar, to which the Redeemer tied himself to before disappearing. There are bishops, monks, priests, cardinals, paladins, nuns, large cathedrals, holy wars, etc. Vatican is called Urbis for some reason. Judas was the only loyal disciple of the original twelve. Murder is not a sin unless done more than twelve times (except if involving children and elderly). Mary is hardly ever mentioned. Instead, the adopted Sister of the Redeemer is as revered as him. The Antichrist is scheduled to appear before the Second Coming of the Redeemer, except he is called the Tempter.
  • The Hanged Redeemer in the Cale trilogy. Played with in that Jesus of Nazareth is known, but seems to be confused with Jonah.
  • The religion in Mercedes Lackey's Bardic Voices and Bardic Choices novels could qualify as this. The church in question has many of the trappings of Medieval Christianity—worship of a "Sacrificed God", monks and nuns, soaring cathedrals, rampant corruption with some good eggs. This troper specifically remembers believers under duress whipping out a "Sign of the Flame," presumably analogous to the Roman Catholic "Sign of the Cross."
  • Sin Washer and his followers, the Washers in Laura Anne Gilman's The Vineart War trilogy although their power structure seems more decentralized than Catholicism, more like Presbyterianism.
  • Madragore in Chronicles of Magravandias. The similarity to Catholicism extends to the various local gods of conquered lands being treated as Madragore's subjects like how various pagan gods were adapted into Catholic saints.
  • The Star Wars Expanded Universe has two examples. Then again, it is a pretty big Galaxy.
    • Sacred Way is an analogue of mainstream Christianity, complete with Sunday Schools (that Han Solo apparently regularly skipped) and priests that conduct services vaguely akin to Catholic Mass.
    • Pius Dei an ancient fundamentalist cult/denomination (with pseudo-Latin name) that plunged the Republic into violent crusades in the distant past.

Live Action TV[]

  • Origin in Stargate SG-1 is—like the rest of the villains in it—a dark alien parody of an Earth religion, in this case, the conservative fundamental Christian one (with just a few touches of Mormonism). Not only do they have their own priests and missionaries, they have their own Jesus figure (Adria) and a distinctly King James-styled holy book. The only difference: the religion's "gods" are Sufficiently Advanced Alien Energy Beings with a fire-and-brimstone motif.
    • Notably, though, the main characters are quick to bring up the similarities. Mitchell, in particular, often compares the Priors and their preaching to his Bible-thumping grandmother.
    • On the other hand, in one episode, they were oddly hesitant to liken Vala's pregnancy to that of Mary's, instead comparing it to the births of King Arthur and Darth Vader.
      • This particular case may be at least partly attributed to the Rule of Funny. Everyone expects the cast to point out Jesus (especially with the aforementioned parallels between Origin and fundamentalist Christianity), so it's funnier when Teal'c answers with Darth Vader (a callback to Teal'c having watched Star Wars 9 times since coming to earth) instead. If you watch the rest of the cast's faces, it's clearly unexpected to them, too. As well, Mitchell suggesting King Arthur is probably partly influenced by the fact that the legend of King Arthur got them into the whole Ori mess in the first place, so it would be on his mind. Carter's reaction to Mitchell clearly show she was about to say Jesus herself. This is compounded by the fact that Mitchell has repeatedly mentioned how often he went to church with his grandma as a kid.
Cquote1

 Vala: (About her spontaneous pregnancy) Have you ever heard of anything like that? (The rest of the team looks around hesitantly)

Teal'c: Darth Vader.

Vala: Really? How did that turn out?

Mitchell: Well, actually, I was thinking about King Arthur.

Carter: Really?

Cquote2
    • Mind you that Daniel also mentions how the Ancients, the good, shiny, all in white heaven like counterpart to the Ori (and creators of Humanity) changed human outlook from Fire = Good to Fire = Bad. Essentially, the Ancients showed themselves as God/Angels in shiny white armor, and depicted the Ori as the Devil/Demons with fire and brimstone hell.
    • The show tended to shy away from making ANY connection to modern religion in the first few seasons. The first "gods" were either ancient Egyptian (Ra, Apophis, Seth, Heru'ur, Hathor), Greek (Chronos) or Norse (Thor). As more system lords were introduced, this rule began to waver, such as with the introduction of a Goa'uld masquerading as Satan - and they even tried to give that one trappings of Egyptian myth (with of course, the completely wrong Goa'uld). Later we even got Yu the Jade Emperor and Amatherasu, but Abrahamic religions remained mostly absent. This is, of course, probably due to the Jesus Taboo.
  • The Bajoran religion from Star Trek: Deep Space 9 would qualify as well. Ben Sisko is the Jesus figure, although, for most of the series, he's uncomfortable with this.
    • The Klingon Jesus was Kahless the Unforgettable, the first Emperor, who was prophesied to return one day (he sort of did).
    • The Vulcans, meanwhile, could be said to have Surak, the founder of their philosophy of logic, though they don't attribute any divine attributes to him. He's more of a Crystal Dragon Buddha or Gandhi.
  • The Minbari religion from Babylon 5 has Valen, who was a Minbari not born of Minbari that came from nowhere, defeated the darkness, united all the Minbari peoples, brought a thousand years of peace, and is prophesied to return. He (sort of) does in that he was Jeffrey Sinclair until he went a thousand years back in time and became half Minbari.


Tabletop Games[]

  • The Church of S'Allumer in Ironclaw, which even has heterodoxies and heresies based on actual doctrinal disputes of historical Catholicism.
  • The polytheistic religions of the various Dungeons and Dragons settings usually have a lawful good deity whose religion is a direct parallel of Christianity.
    • In particular, the church of Paladine (an almost literal Crystal Dragon Jesus who takes the form of a platinum dragon) in the Dragonlance setting has many direct parallels to Roman Catholicism, including having formerly wielded an incredible amount of political power, and having had an inquisition-like purge against wizards, non-humans, and worshipers of non-Good deities (or, more accurately, non-Paladine deities). Of course, said inquisition was rather on the extreme side, and lead directly to the "departure" of the Gods in the Cataclysm, where they "dropped a mountain on the city of Istar". The Gods themselves spent quite a bit of time attempting to avoid such things.
      • Also notable is that Paladine is Dragonlance's direct parallel to the ubiquitous dragon deity Bahamut, also a Platinum Dragon Jesus, who also takes Tyr's place in post Spellplague Forgotten Realms.
    • Eberron's Church of the Silver Flame, which has many paladins in its service and bears similar parallels to Catholicism, including ruling an entire country and leading its own inquisitorial purge against lycanthropes and their shifter cousins back in the day. It's worth noting that Keith Baker, the setting's author, designed Eberron so that clerics of a given god do not have to share that god's alignment, allowing for Knight Templar villains among the ranks of good churches as well as anti heroes among the darker faiths.
      • Although the Sovereign Host is farther from Catholicism in organisation than the Church of Silver Flame, it does have enough stylistic similarities to be the source of the page image.[1]
    • The Triad of Forgotten Realms—Tyr, being the oldest, ruling over the other two, despising evil and injustice, and having the most power at his command, is analogous to the Father. Ilmater, being a selfless and highly merciful god, whose clergy are encouraged to sacrifice themselves to aid those in misfortune, and whose message of hope appeals greatly to the poor and oppressed, is similar to the Son. Torm, with his inspiring courage, his sense of duty and obedience to Tyr, and his conviction in combating or destroying undead and evil forces, is much like the Holy Spirit. And then there are the paladin orders, most prominently Tyr's.
      • Note that Tyr is literally an aspect of the Tyr of Norse mythology. In the 4th Edition version Forgotten Realms, the Triad is broken. Tyr leaves the Realms after killing the god Helm in a duel over Tymora(!!) (then is killed in action fending off a demonic invasion), Ilmater leaves the House of the Triad for Brightwater (the home of Sune, Lliira, Sharess, and Waukeen), and Torm steps up to fill Tyr's place (assuming most of his portfolios) in the Pantheon.
      • Still, "The Triad" veneration is limited. It appears when they have to present an united front against a threat, e.g. as patrons of hard-pressed folk. Janessar, La Résistance in corrupt Calimshan, venerate them along with Mielikki. In recently shattered Tethyr their main feature is united Knights Kuldar order based in one combined abbey, lots of people venerate them separately. Otherwise, Tyr is by far more important than the two others, with both Lathander and Helm (though he has a setback over Time of Troubles) being about as prominent. All five of their churches eagerly band together in any combinations, but Tempus grabs at least as much of the spotlight as any of them effortlessly. Other chaotic and neutral deities are more active than their churches, but most powerful are, probably, the ladies: Mystra (has so much power that she must lend about half to mortal "co-pilots"), Selune (one planetar per temple, functional or not, is a whole celestial army on Prime), Shar (has the Shadow Weave) and Chauntea (main agricultural deity plus joined Earthmother aspect). And another "Triad" bundle-venerated on Faerun is more from Wiccan History.
    • The Ravenloft setting features the Church of Ezra, which, despite centering on a female founder, is a faith in many ways very closely mimicking Christianity, the Catholic Church in particular. Apart from a generally very similar hierarchy, its history includes internal schisms, a branch sect mirroring the Anglican Church in the in-world version of England, and possibly very corrupt ties with an in-world version of the historical Borgias. Fanon takes this further, with devoted fan-made documentation describing the Church of Ezra's impact on the "faith of the loa" (an analogue of real world Vodun practices) in the Southern-Gothic themed domain of the setting. Faiths in Ravenloft tend to be more inclined toward actual monotheism than is common in many other fantasy settings where, while gods may rival each other or war outright, it is common that the majority still acknowledge that the others exist.
      • Ezra herself is a martyred Distaff Counterpart Crystal Dragon Jesus, albeit a Jesus-figure without a Yahweh rather than vice versa.
      • Also, the Ravenloft setting's Church of Hala has been depicted as having chaste nuns living in convents. The Order of the Guardians, though ostensibly non-denominational, also closely resembles a Christian monastic sect, right down to many followers' observing vows of silence.
      • Ravenloft very specifically mentions that the gods can't (or won't) interfere directly in Ravenloft. It is * strongly* inconsistently hinted that any divine powers clerics receive are, in fact, granted by the Dark Powers instead. For outlanders visiting the Domain of Dread, it is recommended that this loss of a close connection be played up to increase divine classes' sense of insecurity. Natives, who have never experienced anything else, expect the gods to be distant or absent.
    • Monte Cook's "World of Praemal", in which he sets most of his popular "Arcana Unearthed" series of products for the D&D game, features a "Mother Church" that's basically Catholicism with the serial numbers filed off.
      • Praemal is the world in which "Ptolus" and associated products are set, and they have the Church of Lothian. "Arcana Unearthed" has very limited religious presence and no large organized religions. There is no Mother Church in Monte Cook's products.
    • The World of Greyhawk has St. Cuthbert, whose church is quasi-Catholic, and is named after St. Cuthbert of Lindesfarne, a 7th-century English saint. Maybe this is a case of Crystal Dragon Sainthood, but still...
      • Let's not forget Pelor...
    • Setting-specific religions aside, plenty of early D&D products' artwork depicted clerics or paladins using crosses as holy symbols, or as insignia on their shields. Yes, even in comic strips where the same characters call upon "the gods" for aid in battle.
    • D&D in general, especially the earlier editions, practically codified this trope. It's explicitly stated the Cleric class was based on militant medieval Catholic orders, and many of the cleric's spells were based on the miracles of Jesus and the prophets and apostles from the Old and New Testaments, but the gods of the setting materials were always a mish-mash of real-world and fictional polytheist pantheons.
    • D&D has also produced an occasional Crystal Dragon Muhammad, as with the Loregiver of Zhakara or Al-Kalim of Ylaruam.
  • The worship of the Emperor of Mankind in Warhammer 40K is always depicted as having a distinct Roman Catholic flavour. Not only that, but 40K fluff has it that the Emperor was born in 10,000 BC, and spent pretty much the whole of human civilization guiding humanity from the shadows until he went public round about the year 30,000 AD to lead the crusades to reunite the human space empire. There is a strong implication that he was Jesus. Took him that long to realize that Love and Peace wasn't working. Seeing as he decided on an atheistic stance before he got mauled, maybe he just realized that faith just strengthened Chaos anyway. Also, there is at least some fluff which indicates that, though he saw the value of warfare in defense of humanity, the more over the top racism and xenophobia of the Imperium crept in after his "death".
    • It's also hinted that the Emperor of Mankind was Saint George in the Book "Mechanicum".
    • The Imperial religion in Warhammer Fantasy Battles is "Roman Catholicism meets the Greek pantheon".
  • In 7th Sea, the Vaticine Church, Objectionist, and Ussuran Orthodox Churches stand in for Roman Catholicism, Protestantism, and Russian Orthodoxy in Theah, a swashbuckling, sorcerous version of medieval Europe. The Vaticine Church also subtly incorporates a few elements of Islam as well. Avalon, the local version of England, even has its version of the Anglican church.
  • The Church of Tal in Magic: The Gathering held an inquisition against magic and were, perhaps, the single most cohesive political entity in the story arc covered by The Dark. Throw in quotes from The Book of Tal in case this doesn't remind you of anything yet. The brilliant part is that the church's role in Terisiare's history is fairly well justified as the natural consequence of the Brother's War (which left the continent divided amongst independent city states in need of a unifying force and with a healthy distrust of magic and sufficiently advanced technology that got them into this mess).
    • Serra is also a Crystal Dragon Jesus, as a planeswalker. Serra is first introduced via Serra Angel. Homelands gives us Serra Inquisitors. But the big point for Serra is Urza's Saga, with cards like Worship, Pariah, and a buttload of angels for Serra. The Urza's Saga editions of plains are all from Serra's Realm, and they feature floating continents. Storyline-wise, Serra's Realm is attacked by Phyrexians (the Expy for hell), leading to Planar Collapse. A year later, the flavor text for Copper-Leaf Angel says "When Serra made angels, people called her a goddess. My angels are superior to hers." (Unless it's late in the game and you've got land to spare, they aren't).
    • Avacyn from the Inistrad block is a curious example. Her church is clearly modeled after medieval Christianity, but the dogma is vastly different (for starters, afterlife is a blessed sleep, and both angels and demons are physical beings rather than otherworldly ones), and Avacyn herself is mankind's saviour in a more direct sense, since she kills the monsters. In addition, she is essencially a moon goddess, like the greek Selene. And a goth.
  • Vampire: The Requiem has the Lancea Sanctum, which is more Crystal Dragon Abrahamic Faiths. Their core belief is that Longinus, the soldier who stabbed his spear into Christ's side, was made a vampire with the taste of the Savior's blood, and eventually experienced the revelation that vampires were Damned by God's will, meant to harrow humanity into righteousness. The Lancea Sanctum itself is made up of many different creeds, ranging in flavor from Catholic to Protestant to evangelical to Muslim, but their core beliefs are strongly Gnostic.
  • Winterweir's faith of Kaalon, the God of Death, bears a lot of similarities to Christianity with its focus on charity and resurrection. The Divine Covenant is another example, being essentially all the darker elements of Catholicism and none of the good.
  • Mage: The Awakening has a curious example; the Seers of the Throne mostly worship the Exarchs as a pantheon, with certain Ministries acting as cults devoted to a particular Exarch. The exception is Paternoster, who regard the Exarchs as emanations of God (similar to the Holy Trinity) with the Exarch called the Father (who is described in a manner similar to the popular conception of God) as the first amongst them and the one they should approach directly, who was predestined to Ascend and were thus inherently divine from the beginning. Paternoster was founded by a Christian, so their beliefs are essentially a way of reconciling the Exarchs with monotheism. They also keep most of this info secret from the religious figures to stifle innovation—not just for purposes of maintaining the Masquerade, but because they believe mortal worship would cheapen the Exarchs.
    • Similarly, some quarters of the Guardians of the Veil (the Pentacle's Masquerade maintainers and secret policemen) have their own Crystal Dragon Jesus: the Hieromagus, the one mage who will prove immune to Paradox and lead Awakened society to enlightenment. Until he comes, they'll keep performing all the necessary sins to keep Awakened society functioning, out of the belief that he will absolve them at the reckoning. Needless to say, this belief doesn't get outside the Guardians, because it would make them look even more frightening (and not in a good way) to the rest of the Pentacle Mages.
  • The Palladium Role-Playing Game has a number of CDJ's in it's world, with the notable exception of The Pantheon(s) of Light and Dark, which are actually the Gods of Ancient Egypt.
  • While there's no particular Crystal Dragon Jesus in Glorantha, they do use the cross as a holy symbol. However, it's the Rune of Death (which 'coincidentally' terrifies the undead), modelled after the Sword of Humakt, the god of death.
  • In Anima: Beyond Fantasy, the Church of Abel is this complete with a crucifixion (though this guy didn't come back), and purge (which continues to some extent) against anyone who isn't 100% human. The closer to the setting's present day one gets, the more tenuous the parallel becomes but it doesn't disappear completely.


Theater[]


Video Games[]

  • Brutal Legend has Ormagoden, Eternal Fire Beast, Creamator of the Sky and Destroyer of the Ancient World. He appears in the intro as a terrifying monster, but is actually a Big Good. He is a Physical God of Heavy Metal, and, in the lore, Heavy Metal originated from his body, as well as the elements to allow life to flourish: Metal (ores), Noise (music), Blood (water) and Fire (heat and energy).
  • Luminous Arc is pretty much one big Church of the Crystal Dragon Jesus, complete with a very cliche (and entirely expected) "twist" (read anything by Lovecraft and you'll understand).
  • This is extremely common in video games. Breath of Fire 2, Xenogears, and La Pucelle: Tactics are just a few examples.
  • In the Silent Hill series, the local religion looks definitely as a mix between Judaism and Christianity, even though the gods are 100% pagan. It apparently began as a merging between local Native American religion and Christianity.
    • The movie makes the Crystal Dragon Jesus connection obvious—the villains (at least the human ones) are such obvious renegade-Puritan, Carrie-White's-Mother stereotypes, yet Jesus isn't a part of their religion, just a variation of the Christian god.
  • Churches in the Tales (series).
    • Tales of Phantasia has the ubiquitous Church of Martel, though it's really more background fluff than anything (though you do meet Martel herself a couple of times). However, the civilization of Fenrir built a huge cathedral to worship... well, Fenrir, complete with stained glass, a giant organ, and a heavy organ BGM called "Perverse Religion". By the time the game actually rolls around, the entire Fenrir civilization has risen and fallen and the cathedral's been abandoned for years, to the point where the door is heavily iced shut.
      • This is given a Shout-Out in the prequel, Tales of Symphonia, with an offhand reference to a legend about Fenrir in the icy regions. Presumably, this later sprouted into a full-fledged religion.
    • Tales of Eternia has the Church of Seyfert, with churches dotting the countryside (and willing to let you rest for free) and a massive cathedral, stained glass and all, atop Mt. Farlos. When you get to Celestia, you find out that Seyfert (and Nereid) are real, and that there's more to the story than a simple creation myth.
    • Tales of Symphonia, set four millennia before Phantasia, depicted a very different Church of Martel, based almost directly on Roman Catholicism, Pope and all.
      • One of Colette's hand gestures when casting spells looks exactly like the sign-of-the-cross. But then, so does Keele's in Tales of Eternia, and he's as close to atheist as you can get when your world is bursting at the seams with nature spirits and you base your entire career on asking them to do things for you.
        • It should be noted that Keele wasn't an atheist, though. He was just of the "I don't really care" mindset.
        • Colette has, in the Play Station 2 version, an ability called "Grand Cross" which would cause a large cross to descend upon the enemy. It is included in the sequel.
      • At one point, the characters all express disgust with the way the Pope treats his half-breed daughter. Nobody mentions that it might be odd for the Pope to have a daughter, half-breed or otherwise. This was not, however, entirely unheard of, particularly during the Renaissance.
        • Fun fact expanding on this. The Other Wiki says that it wasn't uncommon for a Pope or high ranking bishop to be the child of another high ranking clergymen. Source.
    • In Tales of Symphonia Dawn of the New World (which takes place 2 years after Tales of Symphonia), the Church of Martel still exists, but to a lesser extent since the whole Chosen of Regeneration thing doesn't exist anymore (most people went to church to pray for their world to be regenerated).
      • Several scenes have the characters saying that they doubt that the church of Martel would last for much longer, which makes its existence 4000 years later surprising (or a case of the writers overlooking that small detail).
        • Actually, Zelos lampshades that the church would go on worshipping Martel in her World Tree Spirit form.
    • Tales of the Abyss has the Order of Lorelei. Although it doesn't follow a god, but it has a prophecy known as the Score and the robes the Order members have highly resemble those of Catholic priests. The one from Mohs would be the biggest offender.
      • It gets better- the official ordination of a Catholic priest is "presbyter," meaning "elder."
    • Tales of Hearts has the Church of Velleia, which worships the "Great Winged Whale", and yes, has a holy city and a cathedral. There's a church in each city and the main character can go into it and confess. It's really not a Path of Inspiration, though. They just have a near-monopoly on the magical weaponry, Soma, and on the curing of The Heartless-induced Despir Sickness. Also, All Myths Are True, and the bishop is the only one who knew what was really going on the entire time and just had some bad ideas on how to go about dealing with it. The Winged Whale in question, however, turns out to be the villains' base.
  • Definitely present in the Golden Sun series. Despite the fact that everyone in the party can summon mythical pagan gods to reduce their enemies to smoldering piles of ashes, they still feel obliged to go to a sanctum staffed by a suspiciously Christian-esque priest and monks to get rid of evil spirits.
    • Oh, and don't forget the "Priest" and "Cleric" classes.
  • There are ten of these in Romancing SaGa, the most prominent being Elore (for Humans), Saruin (for Gecklings and certain humans), and Nisa (for Taralians/Terranites). Even Death is a god in addition to being the brother of the Big Bad.
    • To get magic, you buy the spells in their respectable temples which increases alignment and can allow said deity to aid you in battle with a benediction of theirs (Elore Restores LP, Nisa restores HP, etc).
  • The Elder Scrolls series features two religions that descend from the same source - the creation of the physical world. The former, which is not only the official religion of the empire, but has been called the religion of Man, is the worship of the divine beings who took part in the creation, the Aedra. They are formulated into a polytheistic faith called the Nine Divines. The cathedrals serving them are notably Gothic and its knights (seen in the expansion) wear Knights Templar-like armor. Previous games gave each god their own knightly order, though that may be a practice of only the Iliac Bay region.
    • It's worth noting that one of the gods worshiped, Talos Stormcrown, was once mortal.
    • For bonus points, the deities themselves include Akatosh, the Dragon God of Time, who looks suspiciously similar to Raptor Jesus.
    • The plot of Morrowind focuses on a trinity religion called the Tribunal. It bears more than a passing resemblance to the Catholic Church - hagiography, apocrypha, an Inquisition, sainthood, and the idea of a "new covenant" supplanting the older Daedric cults of the Dunmer.
      • In geopolitical terms, though, it very strongly resembles Judaism during the time of Jesus, complete with Roman (imperial) occupation, and struggles against paganism (Daedra worship) and so forth. Oh, and a promised Messiah (Nerevarine).
    • The various lines of Dragonborn could be Messiah figures as well (certainly the Chosen One), coming at times of crisis to save Tamriel. It's telling that the most hotly debated sideplot of Skyrim is the civil war, which was touched off by the Thalmor effort to outlaw the worship of Tiber Septim ne Talos, the Dragonborn whose descendants ruled the Empire for over 400 years.
  • The Legend of Zelda, being sort of based on Arthurian legend, has a fictional religion with many parallels to Christianity; the Temple of Time resembles a Christian sanctuary, the young Zelda wears a wimple like a nun or passion bearer and the three goddesses and their Triforce can be seen as a parallel to Christianity's Holy Trinity.
    • In The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time, Rauru, the Sage of Light, is dressed similar to a Franciscan monk.
    • This was stronger earlier in the series. The "Book of Magic" in The Legend of Zelda is a "Bible" in Japan; Link's shield in the first two games bears a cross; in The Legend of Zelda a Link To T He Past (Triforce of the Gods in the original Japanese), Sanctuary is a Christian church, the kanji for the priest there are "holy father" (where Agahnim's kanji are "master of rituals"), and the artbook depicts Link in the Sanctuary, kneeling before a crucifix.
  • In Arc Rise Fantasia, North Noireism contains a patriarch, God(Eesa), and even a Jesus(Child of Eesa).
  • In every Harvest Moon game, there's "The Church", with obligatory priest-collar wearing pastor and "confession" as an occasional option. But the deity they worship is, in fact, the Harvest Goddess. The HM games are generally an intentional mash-up of Japanese culture, Western farming culture, and paganism.
    • More recent games have revealed that there's a Harvest Lord as well. Also, Harvest Moon: Island/Sun adds a nun character into the mix of the universe's religion. In fact, the nun is coincidentally named after a demon hunter.
  • The world of Spira in Final Fantasy X is pretty much run by the local CDJ: Yevon. Except for the Al Bhed who are seen as heathens. To hammer the religious symbolism further, the Giant Space Whale Big Bad is called Sin. And he is supposedly the punishment for all the bad mankind ever and regularly destroys cities. The Aeons are even made out to be the spirits of past summoners who were faithful to Yevon, and the only way to supposedly combat Sin. However, Yevon and the religion is revealed to be a Corrupt Church and in the climax, instead of using the Final Summoning like all other Senseless Sacrifices before to kill Sin for only one day, you tear Sin's face open with an airship cannon and go through the The Very Definitely Final Dungeon that doubles as an Amazing Technicolor Dungeon inside Sin's spirit. Sin is really fucking huge and bizarre from the inside.
  • Final Fantasy XI's nations all have different ways of honoring the same Goddess Altana; however, many of these are at least subtly reminiscent of Christianity, and San d'Oria's church very strongly so.
  • The classic SNES game Act Raiser is somewhat of an unique example, as you are Crystal Dragon Jesus, with some obfuscating Greco-Roman elements tossed in. As the one true god of the gameworld, who was sealed and forgotten as evil overtook the land, you have to revive humanity and lead them to prosperity while destroying the demons that have conquered the earth.
    • The creators of Actraiser have been quoted saying that it was based off of Judeo-Christian monotheism. In the Original Japanese, the player's character was God and Tanzra was named Satan.
  • One of the best-known video game examples may be the Dragon Quest series. They may not use the Crystal Dragon Jesus heavily in the plot, but every game requires players to go to "confession" in a church to save the game. The buildings are also heavily influenced by Christian churches—large cathedral structures in the cities, and small huts with some pews and an altar in the farm villages. Dragon Quest VIII used a Goddess, and VII used a thinly-veiled analogue of the Judeo-Christian God (who was also a Bonus Boss), but the rest of the games were vague about just what the deity in question was.
    • In the DS remakes of Dragon Quest IV and V, the thinly veiled Catholic religion's deity is consistently called "the goddess", and many people venerate the Zenith dragon, a so-called dragon-god, along-side of the goddess as her greatest servant. The Zenith dragon lives in a sky castle with a race of winged humans who are referred to as Angels by at least one NPC in DQIV. His newly created cg appearance makes him look like he is made out of crystal or silver.
    • Also, according to Dragon Quest Heroes Rocket Slime, the well known Slime enemy from the series worship a slime equivalent of the Goddess.
      • The "Goddess statue" item in the game is distinctly human-looking. As to why slimes would worship a human-like being, I am at a serious loss.
  • In the Warcraft series, the Church of the Holy Light is pretty much a mix between Catholic Christianity (huge cathedrals, monasteries and zealous crusaders), Buddhism (meditation and the lack of deities), and The Force (a holy power binding all living beings together).
    • However, it was averted in Warcraft I, where the humans of Stormwind worshipped God and had concepts of Heaven and Hell. It was, however, since retconned into the current "nontheistic" religion of the Light. Elune might also qualify to an extent, since she's described as "the only true god(dess) in Azeroth" and had a "half-deity" son, Cenarius. (Whose father was a demigod stag. Squick.)
    • The belief in God in Azeroth hasn't been written out entirely though, despite the Church of the Holy Light Retcon. Many followers of the Light believe that it is a (semi-, at least) sentient being rather than an impersonal force and there have been many references to it interceding on a personal basis. The WC 3 manual also makes reference to the fact that some in Azeroth believe that the universe was created by an all-powerful being. There's enough ambiguity that you can believe either based on the material.
    • And that reference then runs smack into the wall of the actual cannon pantheon that created the Universe, the Titans (who are crystal dragon Norse gods). If the Light has any sentience, it's created by the things the Titans made (being an emanation from them) rather than being in itself a creator.
      • Not every sentient being in Azeroth was made by the Titans. The elementals, old gods, Eredar/Draenei (before the corruption), most of the demons, trolls... are a few examples of intelligent beings that are confirmed not to be made by the Titans. The Light and its living manifestations (Naaru) may have a different origin, and be a 'parallel' god-like force to the Titans.
      • There's also no evidence that Titans created the universe itself or even individual planets. The lore says that they arrived on Azeroth and found it already inhabited by the Old Gods. The only exposition I've ever seen about how the Titans relate to the creation of the universe is that, according to the Wo W Wiki, the staff of Aman'Thul, the Titan that's head of the Pantheon, was in his hands just seconds after the birth of the universe. They may not even have "created" the sentient races...I remember reading somewhere during the Ulduar quest that many of Azeroth's lifeforms were transplanted from other worlds.
  • In Heroes of Might and Magic V, the Holy Griffin Empire worships Elrath, a literal dragon, whose cult is nevertheless a thinly-veiled (or, actually, not veiled at all) stand-in for Christianity, with churches, monks, inquisitors, saints, and angels. Female Androgynous angels with ridiculously huge swords.
    • Might and Magic VI and VII had the Path of Light, complete with robed monks, cathedrals and churches that would not have looked overly out of place in medieval Europe. VIII instead focused on the Path of Light's still-extant predecessor religion, the Church of the Sun, who goes for more colourful and frail-looking architecture.
    • That said, the angels are actually human Precursors engaged in a war with the demonic-looking alien Kreegans — well, before Heroes of Might and Magic V rebooted the series into an unusual but completely straight fantasy setting with none of the previous science fiction elements.
  • Organized religion in Ivalice has all the trappings of Christianity, specifically Catholic ritual, from the Glabados Church of Final Fantasy Tactics to the Kildean religion in Vagrant Story. The latter finds ample representation in the Church of St. Iocus, a Catholic send-off in all but name that wields great political and military power, and whose sacred icon, called the Rood of Iocus, resembles a cross with four arms instead of two; also, the Cult of Mullenkamp, a heretical offshoot of the Kildean church whose adepts display an upside-down version of the Rood, called the Rood Inverse.
    • Final Fantasy Tactics is especially blatant about this, to the point where it feels like all they did to Christianity is replace a few names. Start replacing "St. Ajora" with "Jesus" and see how much sense it makes. In the remake, instead of "God", you get "gods".
  • Thief has the Hammerites, who worship the "Master Builder", but basically look like medieval Roman Catholicism with steampunk trappings and the Heathen-smiting turned Up to Eleven. The Hammerites undergo a schism between the first and second games, and naturally regard their offshoot brethren, the Mechanists, as arch-heretics. This is due to the Mechanists' favor of lots of automation (over only a little bit of automation) and of course, some good ol' fashioned chauvinist outrage (the Mechanists accept female acolytes). Essentially, the Mechanists are more or less a steam punk version of Protestantism; their leader is very similar to Martin Luther or John Calvin, the nobility see them as a way to make themselves richer and throw off the old religious order (much like the German nobles of the Reformation) and the Mechanists themselves are progressive whilst being arch-zealous at the same time, like many Calvinist Sects.
  • In Star Ocean Till the End of Time, a lot of the (first) plot revolves around the conflict between the atheist Airyglyph and the highly-religious Aquaria. Despite having churches and nuns, the Aquarians worship a goddess and all the pastors are female.
    • They worship a Sun God (Apris, if memory serves) and three goddesses, actually. And I think there's a male pastor in Peterny's church?
  • In Drakengard, the hierarchs are the priests or spiritual leaders of a vaguely-defined religion with a multitude of unnamed gods. They carry staves and have ornamental robes and cast spells, so they resemble D&D clerics. The game's sequel gives them more definition, with the Knights of the Seal as the spiritual side of the organization, dedicated to the seals' continuity and defense.
  • In Ace Combat 6, the Emmerians worship a historical figure dubbed the "Golden King", and have a huge golden statue of him bearing his armor. It is quite clear that the Emmerians hold some kind of religious awe over him similar to that of Jesus or even God, but it mainly seems to be there just to differentiate the Emmerians from the apparently secular Estovakians.
    • When you take the out-of-game fluff (that is, pages upon pages of news articles, historical texts, blueprints, etc. that is always published on the web and nowhere else) into account, the Golden King seems like a thinly veiled King Arthur expy; it's just that the Emmerians are really, really fond of him. Incidentally, a handful of passing references to Christianity and Christian-derived holidays are made throughout the series.
  • Devil May Cry 4 has the island of Fortuna, where the capital has a congregation called the Order of the Sword that worships Sparda. The architecture has a medieval feel, the innocent bystanders and Redshirt Army wear hooded monk-style robes and the leader Sanctus looks very much like a pope. The Order turns out to be a rather corrupt bunch of Knight Templars that want to Wipe The Slate Clean with a demonic invasion and the creation of a false Savior so that they can usher in a new Utopia.
  • Though the tenets of the religion in Diablo aren't gone into much (or at all), the architecture and appearance of the various figures makes the similarity rather obvious.
    • The novels expand on the tenants of Zakarum a little more, and it's typical Christian stuff such as forsaking evil in your heart, as well as preaching gentleness and forgiveness. More cynically, the church is also said to be very open to donations.
  • Fire Emblem games commonly do this, generally draping stories of "past hero" around a Bishop-class character. Usually the head deity/hero of the church will have the title of Saint. They aren't an actual God, just a really cool person. The Sword of Seal and The Sword of Flame have Saint Elimine.
    • Actually played straight in Path of Radiance and Radiant Dawn with the Begnion Empire. It is a theocracy whose structure is almost identical to the Catholic Church, with the Apostle serving as a female Pope of sorts and the nobles of the country akin to the College of Bishops. These individuals are more than just leaders; they are respected members of their religion, as they are believed to be chosen by the Goddess herself. They honor Ashera, who is the Order component of the goddess Ashunera. Ashunera, the 'Goddess of Dawn', incidentally caused a world-wide flooding that wiped out almost all civilizations of the world after she lost control of her divine powers. The guilt caused Ashunera to split into Ashera (order) and Yune (chaos). Yune is treated as an evil figure, and even referred to as a 'dark god'. So we have the 'good' goddess, Ashera, and the 'bad' goddess, Yune. God-Satan, anyone?
    • Although in the end it turned out Yune was the good one that loved beorc and laguz while Ashera was the evil one that would rather turn all sentient beings on the planet to stone rather than have them violate her idea of Order.
      • Except neither of them were actually good or evil, just representations of opposite extremes.
  • The Order in Strife are a bunch of religious zealots who worship a Giant Space Flea From Nowhere and oppose all human reproduction, choosing to instead extend lifespans with cybernetic enhancements. They also rule the world and you have to help La Résistance defeat them.
  • In Terranigma, the main character acts as both Crystal Dragon Jesus and Crystal Dragon Moses. With The Elder and Beruga as the Satanic equivalent. It's that kind of game.
  • Despite largely being based off Norse Myth, Shadowbane falls under this too. While the All-Father is presumed to be absent, incapacitated, or dead, prayers to saints and archons still work (much to the relief of the prelates and bishops). There's also an even more militant offshoot faith that likes burning heretics a little too much...
  • In the Japanese version of Faxanadu, gurus held crosses, and their churches had stained-glass windows depicting Jesus' crucifixion. These were removed for the international release, though a couple of churches did have crosses at the very top.
  • The little known Siege of Avalon Anthology almost averts this by replacing every single mention of religion with "spirits," but somehow still has crosses in the chapel. And the graveyards. And on monks' robes.
  • In Guild Wars: Prophecies, the prophet who makes the titular prophecies is, quite literally, a Crystal Dragon.
  • In ZPC, the player takes the role of a Rambo-like Crystal Dragon Jesus. With Psychic Powers.
  • Andraste in Dragon Age can easily be mistaken for a Crystal Dragon Jesus, but is in fact much more of a Crystal Dragon Jesus/Mary/Mohammed/Joan of Arc amalgam. She was chosen by The Maker rather late in life to be his prophetess (Mohammed) for being exceptionally devout and a true believer (Mary, Mohammed, Joan). She then unified the factions of dissenters against the religious establishment and created an army which she led on a highly successful Exalted March (Mohammed, Joan). She was later betrayed by some of her closest generals and advisors (Jesus) and burnt at the stake (Jesus, Joan). However, she was never regarded as a child of the Maker, nor was she ever resurrected.
    • The Andrastian Chantry is somewhat a mix of the Byzantine Orthodoxy and the Catholic Church, however.
    • Amusingly enough, there is an example of a cult worshipping a dragon that they believe is a reincarnation of Andraste.
    • There are also the Qunari, whose teachings are a lot closer to a strand of extremist, decidedly non-pacifist, Buddhism. However in the game, they clearly stand in for the expansion of Islam into Southern Europe during the middle ages. Comming over the sea, they settled some parts of Thedas and converted the people to the Qun (Spain, Southern Balkan), which caused the Chantry to call for Exalted Marches to push them back (the crusades), and they regard it as their duty to spread knowledge of the divine law to the infidels, which goes hand in hand with expanding their empire. There are also some aspiring converts in Kirkwall, which causes (local) terrorists to plan attacks with weapons of mass destruction to fight the spread of the heretic techings of the Qunari.
  • Played perfectly straight in Ragnarok Online. There is a Knight Templar class (the Crusader), a Priest and Acolyte class, scapulars are acolyte-class armor, Holy Water can be created by the Acolyte class, many of the Priest's protective skills are named after Catholic ceremonies or liturgies, and there's even a Vatican in the city of Rachel. Very strongly Catholic-flavored. However, the Nuns Are Mikos, All Monks Know Kung Fu, the Pope is a cute little blonde loli, Jesus is made no mention of, God is hopelessly conflated with the entire ancient Nordic pantheon of Asr, and finally, underneath the Vatican, God turns out to be an Eldritch Abomination—though the Crusader skill that literally asks God to punch the target in the face STILL WORKS ON IT. To sum up Ragnarok's take on God: God is Jesus is Odin is Thor is Frigga is Azathoth. The whole religious structure is so hilariously disconnected from "real" Christianity once you get past the surface, it's incredible.
  • In RuneScape, most humans worship Saradomin, god of order. Saradominist churches and clergy have a Christian appearance to them. Zamorak, god of chaos, is treated as a Satanic figure by Saradominists but enjoys a strong following among certain monsters and some humans. Unsurprisingly, many of his followers happen to be demons. However, he happens to have werewolves and vampires on his side as well.
  • The Iron Grip series has Trithinism, worshipped primarily by the Fahrong nation (who even made it their official state religion). Though not much is shown of its theological nature, its history seems to mirror the developments of both Christianity and Islam in several ways. There is also some mention of a concept similar to the belief in reincarnation. Trithinite worshippers are usually portrayed (at least in Expanded Universe fluff) as either Rape, Pillage and Burn Church Militant fanatics or more humble and peaceful missionaries spreading the faith by word, charity and medical treatment of the needy. Grey and Gray Morality indeed...In addition, some levels of the second game feature Trithinite churches with paintings and small idols of the religion's One God, Sa.
  • As noted, Breath of Fire as a series has played with this trope—both with the straight Crystal Dragon Jesus example and a Crystal Dragon Buddha variant.
    • The best example is with Breath of Fire II which had the Church of St. Eva. As it turns out, the church ended up being "steeplejacked"--taken over from within--by the Big Bad of the game, literally turning the church of the Crystal Dragon Jesus into a Church of Evil. The parishioners are none the wiser.
  • Ogre Battle 64 features the Holy Lotus Empire, a theocracy led by a Pope which dominates its surrounding countries. Since the Empire is the big antagonist for most of the game, God Is Evil may apply.
    • Lotus/Lodis is responsible for nearly everything bad that happens in the series that isn't instead the result of demons. They're major antagonists in both Ogre Battle 64 and Tactics Ogre, and a negative political influence in the backstory of the original Ogre Battle. The only game in the series so far where they aren't antagonistic in some way is Tactics Ogre: The Knight of Lodis. God Is Evil may or may not apply, but Path of Inspiration or Church of Evil are fairly plausible.
  • In the Shin Megami Tensei games, the Messian sect, which represents the Law alignment, definitely fall into this category: Hood Monks, Priests, leaders who resemble bishops, and an abundance of Christian imagery in their chur... Er, temples. Not to mention that, as their name implies, they are utterly devoted to their "Messiah" who in the first game, turns out to be one of your sidekicks, and in the second, is YOU and most of the Law-Aligned Demons are Judeo-Christian and include most of the major angels.
  • In Lunar, Althena's temple in the first game clearly satirizes Christianity, with priestly vestments and stained glass, but the religion in general seems to be fairly decentralized, with most towns having only a statue of the Goddess as their sole religious establishment. The sequel Eternal Blue takes this several steps further, having a Christian-inspired sanctuary in many of the game's towns.
  • In Legacy of Kain, the primary human religion is never explored in great detail, but damn if it doesn't look like Catholicism. It is, however, a fairly Corrupt Church and during the time of the original Blood Omen, was a front for a Religion of Evil.
  • Eve Online has the Amarrian religion, which is modeled on medieval Catholicism. They didn't even bother to rename God. While this is not known in-game, fluff indicates that it is actually descended from a radical Christian sect.
  • The characters of La Pucelle worship at the Church of the Holy Maiden, a religion with very Catholic-style trappings.
  • Humans in Disciples worship the Yahweh-like Highfather, who uses angels to carry messages and help humans. There are cathedrals, holy warriors, inquisitors, etc. However, the guy who really created the world and humanity is Bethrezen, an obvious version of The Devil, except the fall was not his fault. He grows mad after 10,000 years in the world's molten core and creates demons to kill everything.
    • The dwarves were created by and worship Wotan, whose name itself is an alternate spelling of Odin, complete with an explosive temper. They love runes, although that could be more Gaelic than Norse.
  • Barkley, Shut Up and Jam: Gaiden has Clispaeth, AKA Crispus Attucks, the first man to be killed in the Boston Massacre. In this setting however, The Boston Massacre led to the Cyberpocalypse.
  • In the Pokémon world, some religions seem to worship Pokemon, typically powerful Legendaries. The anime has a few Buddhist parallels early on, but the game religions don't really seem to be based off anything. However, there is a church type building in Pokémon Diamond and Pearl, where the people talk in a rather preachy manner too.
  • Grandia II effectively has Catholicism in the game, what with Granas (God), Valmar (Satan), a second coming, the Pope, churches and priests.The only thing missing is Jesus.
  • In MARDEK, the most prominently featured religion is the Church of YALORT, who is a dragon.
  • Sengoku Basara has "Xavism", a religion preached by the missionary Xavi (a stand-in for missionaries in Japan, specifically Francis Xavier), which mostly composes of acting like really Campy Love Freaks and spouting tons of Gratuitous English while chanting Xavi's name as well as other oddities (apparently "Angry Kitten" is a suitable baptismal name). While it is considered a Path of Inspiration, it's also considered a faction of Harmless Villains, though certain characters do occasionally show up as converts.
  • Septerra Core. The whole thing with the son of Creator fighting the incarnation of Evil feels like this. Also, the monks from 3rd Shell have Christian habits.
  • The Sims Medieval gives us the Church of The Watcher. It is divided into two denominations: the "Peteran" church and the "Jacoban" church (Essentially the equivalents of medieval Protestants and Catholics, respectively).
  • Allods Online has Tenses, who was an archmage that sacrificed himself to grant everyone immortality of the soul. The church of Tenses in Kania has trappings very similar to Russian Orthodox Church. There is also Nezeb, who is a Crystal Dragon Lenin.
  • The Church of Yahvo, faith of the D'ni from the Myst series, had its own versions of Heaven and Hell (conceived as Ages), divinely-inspired prophets, and its own foretold messiah (the Great King).
  • The Anju religion mentioned in Solatorobo is essentially Catholicism WITH BIRDS! To be able to enter their holy forest where all the birds live when they're not guiding souls to the afterlife, you need to obtain a string of rosary beads, and lore says they always have a Bible on hand and worship in churches on Sundays.


Web Comics[]

  • Jennifer Diane Reitz is known to have an antipathy frothing hatred toward the Abrahamic religions, "terrible desert religions", as she puts it. Her strip Pastel Defender Heliotrope has a monolithic Corrupt Church which is keen on the oppression and persecution of virtuous sexual minorities, such as the protagonists, and which worships an entity known as—wait for it—Godan. It is then debunked repeatedly. Come on, man, put some effort into it.
  • Strange Candy features two parodies in its Fantasy-RPG story arc. The first parodies Falun Gong. The other is Hubbomadaster, religious zealots who derive their name from L. Ron Hubbard, Mohamed, and Zoroaster. They "cleanse" people and launch wars on other nations for being infidels. And their king uses words like "misunderestimated".
  • Tales of the Questor has two: the Rac Cona Daimh Church of the Sojourner, and the Human Universal Church. The former has a conventional cross and cross-in-a-fish imagery associated with it, as well as conventional pastors and churches, although the stained glass portrays a glowing god and human monk and a stag rather than the traditional Christian version. It's apparently fact for the universe. The latter is treated as being speciest, unpleasant to "heathens", and misguided—to the point where an exorcism involves holy water, the use of a modesty ward like a cross, and a Latin chant that translates to "May faulty logic undermine your entire philosophy"—but not intentionally evil or cruel. The Universal Church still has a suspiciously cross-with-a-circle-looking symbol, similar to the Presbyterian cross or High cross but with crystals slapped onto the side, a pastor with priest collars, and a very church-like church.
  • Subverted in Order of the Stick; when Durkon reflects on "What Would Thor Do?", it isn't very useful.
    • It would have been useful had he still had his top two divine spells for the day. Well, the dungeon-smashing bit. Not so much the "return to the afterlife and drink a lot of beer" part.
      • Blasphemy. Durkon is always up for drinking a lot of beer.
  • Digger, being a Fantasy Kitchen Sink, has not only a Crystal Dragon Jesus called the Good Man, it also has an equivalent of Virgin Mary. And an evil version of said Virgin Mary figure made from certain people's belief that God, wherein the two universes are merging, is evil. She murdered her myth's version of the Good Man, and looking at her face drove one of the characters partially insane.
  • Ansem Retort considers Batman to be a god. Word of God assures us that Zombie Superpowered Batman is indeed terrifying.
Cquote1

 Green Lantern Batman: YOU'RE ALL FUCKED.

Cquote2
    • Ironically enough, one of the persons that asks you to accept Batman as your lord and savior? Jesus.
Cquote1

 Jesus: BATMAN DIED FOR YOUR SINS!

Cquote2
  • The Church of Thrasu, the dominant religion in Kivallia in The Challenges of Zona.
  • Chess Piece has the Leviathan religion, which may be the closest literal example of this trope.
  • Gene Catlow has The Creator Of All Things and its associated religion. The related Fanfic has The Nameless One and it's associated religion. Word of God says that the two deities are one and the same.
  • In Looking for Group, the Sisters and Sons have a roughly similar dogma to real-world Christianity, if you replaced God with a bunny rabbit.
  • Homestuck: The Sufferer is pretty much a non-divine Troll Jesus (the jury's still out on whether his name is actually Jegus), and the secrecy and persecution of his followers after his execution is very much like what became of Christianity following Jesus' end. The Sufferer's symbol and that of his followers (that is to say, the Cancer sign) even derives from his method of execution!
    • However, instead of growing in power and becoming a dominant religion, The Sufferer's religion remained a small cult, eventually fading away and nearly vanishing from history.
    • Later on a troll character from an Alternate Universe is seen wearing the Sufferer's symbol, hinting that some version of Troll Christianity exists in that universe as well.


Web Original[]


Western Animation[]

  • The various Transformers continuities have various incarnations of the god Primus, who has been portrayed as alternately an extremely powerful but tangible being, an actual god, or a tangible Transformer creator figure whose vehicle mode just happens to be the planet Cybertron. When in his most god-tastic form, Unicron often plays the Devil to his God.
    • Word of God suggests that The Fallen is playing this role in the live action movies.
    • And there's the minor detail that Optimus Prime has effectively become some kind of Robot Jesus - sometimes referred to as Optimus Christ. Greatly aided by the fact that his tendency to die and be resurrected shortly thereafter is more or less a running gag at this point.
    • Word of God for Transformers Animated states that there's even a Church of Primus on Cybertron, with Vector Prime acting as a sort of Pope. Unfortunately, the church is mostly full of Hellfire Evangelists. One wonders how they act alongside the Cybertronians who believe in the Allspark.
  • In Moral Orel, this was the obvious purpose of Orel's short lived dog Bartholomew, who was killed because he spread too much joy to the townsfolk.
  • Completely intentional, but the Super Adventure Club in the South Park episode, The Return of Chef, is clearly meant to mock and mirror Scientology.
  • In Invader Zim, Santa Claus is basically used in this capacity.
  • Aang from Avatar: The Last Airbender is an interesting case. The concept of an 'Avatar' is one taken from Hinduism and Buddhism, meaning a god who has taken mortal form. However, there are many separate philosophies across the world which seem to hold elements from other Asian, Pagan and Native American belief systems.
    • Specifically, the mythology of Aang as the Avatar is lifted directly from The Dalai Lama, down to reincarnation and being chosen at a young age by ancient toys and heirlooms from the previous Avatar's possessions. The creators even named him "Buddha Boy" as a working name before they came up with "Aang."
    • It should be noted that the concept in the series is more "New Age"-ish than Hindu and quite more secular, considering the Avatar is treated like the incarnation of the world and "master of all four elements" and is not being connected to any deity.
  • Robotology from Futurama.
  1. That blue-yellow cross-thing? The symbol of the Sovereign Host as a whole
Advertisement