1. Organizations

Dyadic Faith

The Meerha and Dyadic Faith holds that other gods are lesser beings, fragments of the creator that split away and got lost when it divided itself. Devotees are taught that these foreign deities are to be pitied yet respected, as sources of chaos and discord in the world despite their intent or benevolence.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catharism

Dualistic monotheism, The two gods were one, but in its loneliness it split itself into two aspects. 

Preists wear black and blue to indicate night and day.

Anchorites [monks, nuns] form most of the clergy.

Monks and Nuns of the night goddess wear: black robes, indicating the night sky, and white collars or habits indicating the moons. Gold elements show respect to the day.
Clergy of the day god wear white robes, symbolizing purity and light, and gold collars or habits indicating the moon. Black elements show respect to the night.

They see the three moons as the eyes of the goddess, and  thus habits and crests with a band or third eye over the forehead are seen as ritual representations of her.

The sun god is believed to posses a single eye, and thus blindfolds, especially those with a single eye in the center, show respect to the god of law, and are ceremonial in judicial proceedings.  Dyadic judges are advised by a pair of Counselors whom give them imput on proceedings, and are each responsible for assessing evidence either in defense or condemnation of the subject in question. 

Divinities syncretized into the dyadic faith often become Angels, or eidolons. Which act as patrons of specific purviews under one of the two great gods. 

 

prayer beads some times on ropes of extreme length, enough to create prayer bindings. 

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