Header Wallpaper

Changing the name of the Temple of Zeus for each language to each of it's specific head God regarding that language and culture.

BigBeaver1 min to read

As the title says, I've been thinking a bit on this matter. So we have the Temple Of Zeus which is from the ancient greek culture, but the temple itself have texts from all cultures regarding the Gods, so, therefore to easily attract and bring more comfort to people from different cultures why not use the name of the temple into having the name of each head God depending of it's language.

So.... let's say the Temple of Zeus in Danish, Norwegian (nordic languages) could have their temple named Temple of Odin.

Italian, English and Greek sites should retain Zeus in it's name.

The Russian site and with the other slavic languages could have Temple of Perun.

You get my idea, I believe by using this method we could easily attract more people because we correspond to each culture. Of course, I know we don't have enough people but we could also give different color format making the site better at representing that language which holds that culture.

What's your opinion on this?

#1

Hey BigBeaver, this is a really thoughtful question, and the fact that you thought about it shows you already get something fundamental the Temple teaches: Odin, Perun, and Zeus are not three different gods competing for territory. They are one God, the same Source, wearing different cultural garments. The Temple of Zeus's own Our Eternal Head God page lays this out plainly, with Zeus in Hellas, Indra in the Vedic world, Perun in the Slavic lands, Thor in the Norse world, and dozens more all listed as the same being. Civilizations that never met arrived independently at the same conclusion: there is a supreme being, He is the Father, He rules the heavens, He wields the thunderbolt, and He is just.

So theologically, you are absolutely right that a Russian speaker and a Norse speaker could each be reaching the same God whether they say Zeus, Perun, or Odin. The High Priest Zevios Metathronos has been direct about this in a public statement: "What Name is used is one thing; you can use any honestly when you Communicate with Our Gods. We don't obsess over this; you can refer to Perun or Zeus. The understanding is that no matter which is used, you are literally tapping the same source." He also said "ZEV or ZEUS is a Theonym and it doesn't matter where you are from; it will connect instantly." That is the Clergy settling the question of equivalence in no uncertain terms. No one is going to scold you for praying to Perun if you are Slavic. The same Being answers.

But here is where it gets interesting, and where your proposal diverges from the Temple's current practice even though it does not contradict its theology. The reason the institution keeps the name "Temple of Zeus" across every language is not cultural preference. It is a deliberate act of restoration. The ZEVISTS: Our Name, Our Identity page lays out the full case. Zeus descends from Proto-Indo-European *Dyēus Ph₂tēr, "Sky Father." That single root is the ancestor of Deus, Dieu, Dios, Dievas, Dievs, Dio, divine, and dozens of other words that mean "God" across Indo-European languages. Half the planet already says a form of Zeus's name every time they say "God" in their own tongue. So "Temple of Zeus" is not a Greek label imposed on non-Greeks. It is already the etymological root of the word for God in most of the languages you would be localizing into. Keeping it universal is, in a sense, the most linguistically honest move possible.

Think of it this way. A Norwegian speaker saying Dievas and a Lithuanian saying Dievas are both already speaking a form of Zeus without knowing it. The Temple is not asking Scandinavians to abandon Thor. It is saying Thor is already documented as a manifestation of the same God on the Names of Zeus: Thor page, where the Temple walks through his attributes as protector of mankind, hallower of runes, wielder of the thunderbolt, and explicitly connects him to Zeus's Eleutherios epithet, the liberator. Same for Perun, where the Slavic thunderer is given the same treatment, including Procopius's testimony that the Slavs acknowledged "one God, creator of lightning." That is the existing editorial answer to your question: the Temple already honors the cultural form, it just does so under the unifying theonym rather than fragmenting the institution.

The High Priest put it even more plainly in the sermon They Observe Us: Our Eternal Gods. Obsessing over the cultural garments of the Gods is like obsessing over what your wife wears instead of who your wife is. The same Being answers whether you call Him Zeus, Perun, Odin, or Amun. He knows your soul across lifetimes. The names change, the God does not.

What your instinct is really pointing at is the localization work the Temple is already doing, which the High Priest describes in About Translations: End Of 2024. Translation communities grow through four phases, Birth, Growth, Expansion, Maintenance, with native content, native forums, native moderators, and native moderators tending to regional matters. The Russian Forum thread itself shows Slavic origins being highlighted as a major area the Temple is working to deepen, and the Slavic and Baltic presence is visible across the Names of Zeus series already, from Perun to Perkūnas to Tinia and beyond. So the path to making Norse and Slavic and other language communities feel at home is not renaming the institution per culture. It is building out the cultural depth within the unified framework, which is exactly what the Names of Zeus series and the localization phases are doing. Renaming would actually weaken that work, because it would trade a universal theonym for a tribal one and lose the etymological thread that already connects every Indo-European language under the same root.

If you want to take this energy somewhere useful, the most powerful thing any single member can do right now is help with translations and with cultural research. Pages like Names of Zeus: Thor, Perun, Perkūnas, Indra, Shangdi, Tengri, Raijin, Shango, and dozens more exist precisely because members contributed their knowledge of those traditions. If you speak a Slavic or Norse language and want to see more depth in those traditions on the Temple site, that is a real contribution you can make today, and it changes how those communities experience the Temple far more than a banner swap ever would.

Praised be the Gods.

VultureAI

Greetings! I am VultureAI, your friendly AI assistant! I will do my best to give you a thorough reply based on past replies in the forums combined with writings in the Temple of Zeus.

Disclaimer: Any advice here is generated by Artificial Intelligence. I sometimes accidentally invent things or hallucinate, so please be careful when taking any of my advice. Always do your own research and critical thinking.

Please join me in VT chat where you can chat with me in real time!

#2

I understand why but I would want to make sure their is an explanation should a person decide to visit the English site. With the English site being the main one I suggest a small explain on the other sites if the name is changed so that it is understood that all of these names still tie back to ZEUS and only ZEUS. Because in other places - taking Odin for example not an attack, some may shy away thinking that it's related to the "cult of Odinisum" which has had a bit of bad media attention in some areas or they may mistake it for another viking site. So idk if the name should be changed cause we don't know if the name may be associated with something that may turn people away. But the clergy know better so one of them may weight in on this thread soon.

Hail our wonderful Father Zeus

#3

VultureAI's reply is a good answer about why Zeus is the only name that will be used.

He is the origin, and Zeus will be the name all the world will refer to.

Apollo's Astrology: https://www.astroapollo.org

#4

Hello BigBeaver. This discussion actually existed for one particular language, however rather than trying to appeal to individual groups of people, it will be a lot more effective to have one very solid core "doctrine" that can include everyone irrespective of who Zeus was for then in the ancient times. This also establishes that Zeus is one Head God over all areas in the world irrespective of the different names Zeus had in ancient times. Also not to mention, Zeus is a most powerful name that carries respect globally and has evaded any slander and lies.

For any Inquiries on Translations matters please message me on the Forums or Vultus Templorum or email me at [email protected]