Kannazuki no Miko Priestesses of the Godless Month

by Marcus blake   Jul 17, 2010


"Legends warn those who summon "Ame no Murakumo" of the terrible price that the god of swords demands to restore the world"

The moon and the sun
Two shining aura's or light
Indifferent yet alike in so many ways
Unable to be one
They exist in the middle of darkness
Aligned and together forever
but never can anything more
"Up on the moon there's a deserted shrine no one knows about"
Inside a women waits in darkness for her equal her other completion
She endures the cold space, and made patience her friend
A foul beast "Yamata no Orochi" a serpent with 9 necks
descends from the sky to swallow the world
Let the sun illuminate the moon to shine
"Eight million other god's powers"
"I wish for the revival of Kenshin Ame no Murakumo"
"Susano Kami's priestess's life is to be given to the atoning life
"Shinchoku!"
Now two Gods face each other in the center of world
it brings remembrance cause they feel they've meet here before
What happens when good and evil clash?
When happens when light shines in the night sky?
"Up on the moon there's a deserted shrine no one knows about..."

(Notes for those who wanted to know what some of the words in here meant and "Kannazuki no miko" means ~Priestesses of the Godless Month~ lol ^_^

Shinshoku is to officiate at all shrine ceremonies on behalf of and at the request of worshippers. He is not expected to lecture, preach, or act as spiritual leader to his parishioners; rather, his main role is to ensure the continuance of a satisfactory relationship between the kami (god or sacred power) and the worshipper through offerings, evocation of the kami, and mediation of the deity's blessing to the parishioners

The term kami is often translated as "god" "lord" or "deity" but it also includes other forces of nature, both good and evil, which, because of their superiority or divinity, become objects of reverence and respect. The sun goddess Amaterasu Ōmikami and other creator spirits, illustrious ancestors, and both animate and inanimate things, such as plants, rocks, birds, beasts, and fish, may all be treated as kami. In early Shintō, the heavenly kami (amatsukami) were considered more noble than the earthly kami

Yamata no Orochi is a legendary 8-headed and 8-tailed dragon that was slain by the Shinto storm-god Susanoo.

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