Hmm, I'm not sure what to tell you that the song didn't say pretty bluntly.
" For more have died in serving life Than ever death demands."
It's a conversation wherin a goddess of Death is pointing out that in building up politics around serving the goddess of Life, more people were dying by far than the goddess of Death would ever have asked for, or wanted to process so quickly.
It makes sense to me, especially when I think about the kinds of deities that have large bodies of people willing to go to wars over them, and what those deities ostensibly care about.
Christianity and Islam both serve a god who ostensibly prioritizes life above everything but faith.
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" For more have died in serving life
Than ever death demands."
It's a conversation wherin a goddess of Death is pointing out that in building up politics around serving the goddess of Life, more people were dying by far than the goddess of Death would ever have asked for, or wanted to process so quickly.
It makes sense to me, especially when I think about the kinds of deities that have large bodies of people willing to go to wars over them, and what those deities ostensibly care about.
Christianity and Islam both serve a god who ostensibly prioritizes life above everything but faith.
--Ember--
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