Church of Moander

Clergy
Many lonely folk, adrift in the world at large, were drawn to the Darkbringer for the firm direction It gave their life. Servants of Moander were required to endure a ceremony to join the cult that involved the absorption of a seed of Moander. If worthy, the seed gradually grew in the initiate's body until the entire internal structure was replaced with rotting plant matter. A small flowered tendril protruding from the ear and wound through the hair was the only visible indication of the change. At this stage, whenever it wished, Moander could assume complete direct mental and physical control of the recipient. It could also speed up or slow down the rotting process, which allowed for further control of Its servants through fear.

Ranks
Priests of the Darkbringer were referred to as Minions of Moander, with senior clergy taking the title of High Minion and the high priest being called Master Minion. The head of the entire Faerûniun church was the Mouth of Moander, usually a human female priestess. Extremely rarely, a Master Minion would become an Undying Minion upon death, an ooze-like undead creature known as a skuz. Minions were expected to spread rumors of Moander's power, feed its Abomination, and infect new followers with the seed of Moander.

Holy Objects

 * Darkmoon, a moon blade corrupted and enchanted by the influence of Moander.

Magic
"Druids" who worshiped Moander in the days of ancient Netheril, who then was known as the Beast-Lord, were granted such winds of antiquity as animal horde, elemental swarm, etherwalk, fear contagion, highway, interdiction, revelation, shooting stars, spiral of degeneration, stalker, storm of vengeance, and wolf spirits.

Holy Days and Rituals
Cultists were expected to kill something or gather vegetation on a daily basis in order to spread rot and decay. Most also celebrated Balefire on the first of Hammer by constructing huge bonfires in its name to hold back the cold.

Regions
The oldest pace of Moanderite worship in Faerûn was an underground temple of the Abyss of the Abomination in the city of Yûlash in the Moonsea region that was over 1,000 years old by the 14 century DR. The temple was a sizable hidden complex that predated the city itself. Forests of Ylraphon were rumored to shelter a hidden shrine of Moander. A temple of Moander could be found proudly standing in the City of a Thousand Temples–Bezantur in Thay. Before the 14 century DR, Moander had a solid worship in the nation of Sembia.

History
In the, Moander's "creeping evil" was unleashed on the city of Tsornyl in Cormanthor. The corrupting forces spread blight through the lands surrounding the city. The deity's dark influence twisted and mutated every living thing in the vicinity of Tsornyl, including members of its own church. Unable to cleanse nor destroy the evil, elven High Magic was used to sever the "creeping evil" part of Moander and imprison it within the ruined Tsornyl, later renamed to the dreaded forest of Darkwatch. This act cost 32 elven lives, including two High Mages of Myth Drannor. The loss of power echoed in Moander's diminished influence on Toril.

In the, the Cormanthyr elves of Myth Drannor battled the deity's avatar in its last remaining major temple, located in what later become the city of Yûlash. The avatar was known as the Abomination of Moander–a huge mass of rotting vegetation and carrion that left the ground void of any living thing in its wake. The Coronal of the City of Song and sixteen of High Mages weaved elven High Magics and cast the binding on the Darkbringer. It sealed the essence of the Abomination beneath the ruins, to be released only by an "unborn child." Most of the priests were slain, yet some cultists fled south and the church managed to survive. Over the next millennia, they tried to free the Abomination, but to no avail.

A group of halfling Akh'Velahr scouts discovered a large group of Moanderites in the, not far from the imprisoned god. The seven halflings violently destroyed the encampment becoming heroes of Myth Drannor. In the, Lord Illitran Starym of Myth Drannor came across Moander's prison and entered a pact with the Jawed God. Moander altered and corrupted the man's moonblade making it wieldable by those undeserving. As the result, Illitran Starym proved his loyalty to the City of Song by proudly unsheathing his moonblade in front of Myth Drannor's rulers.

In the, a cadre of drow invaded northern Cormanthor, attempting to build a stronghold atop an ancient temple of Moander. The drow were repelled by Myth Drannor's Akh'Velahr within next 20 months. In the, the darkness within the temple of Moander started turning. The area became flooded with foul beasts of the Jawed God and its cultists. With effort of Myth Drannor's High Mages and three battalions on the Akh'Velahr, the are was made safe once again. In the wake of the Moanderite invasion, elves discovered many of "lost spells" excavated by Moander's church and restored to use.

The Moanderite worship's decline began over a thousand years before the 14 century DR, when the forest elves of the City of Song, Myth Drannor clashed with the Darkbringer for the last time. They buried that Temple of Moander under the land what would later become Yûlash and slew the church's clergy. Moander's avatar – the dreaded Abomination of Moander, was imprisoned in the buried temple, held trapped by a curse that could only be lifted by an "nonborn child," something that seemed impossible. The god himself was banished from Toril, and elves of Myth Drannor hoped the worship of the god of decay would wither and die. It was not to be, however, as enough of Moanderites survived the massacre and carried on growing the faith in the lands south of Cormanthor.

One of Moander's temples in the Underdark was claimed by the Church of Eilistraee, before the 14 century DR. The followers of the drow goddess expanded the Promenade of the Dark Maiden and made the abandoned Moanderite temple part of the complex. Prior to that, the Moanderite temple was desecrated by the worshipers of Tyr.

As years passed, Cults of Moander attempted to free the god's avatar from under Yûlash to no avail, leaving behind stones carved with the Darkbringer's symbols. The god was remained trapped until the Kythorn 5, the. The Church of Moander found unlikely allies in a sorceress Cassana, her lich ally Zrie Prakis, Moander's ancient enemy Phalse, and the Fire Knives assassins. The dark alliance pooled their resourced to create a living construct, a "nonborn child," each member of the alliance planned on using the construct for their own purpose. The Church of Moander sought to use it to unleash the Abomination of Moander onto the world once more. Against all odds, the construct was lost to the group and gained sentence, becoming the hero known as Alias. Via manipulation and the compulsory magic of her azure bonds, Alias and her companions were lured to the war-torn Yûlash and freed Moander. Eventually, Moander's avatar was destroyed in the battle over Westgate, and many of the Darkbringer's cultists were killed in the battle of the Hill of Fangs outside of the city. Of corse, the cultists of Moander were far from gone.

The following year, Moander attempter to return to the Realms through a tribe of enslaved saurials snatched from another world. The attempt was unsuccessful and resulted in the deity's seeming death at the hands of Finder Wyvernspur, who, in turn, claimed the Darkbringer's divinity and reached apotheosis. However, even with Moander's apparent death, the church remained functioning as sporadic cults and small hidden temples. Enough worship could return Moander to his past strength in time, however that was made complicated by the drow goddess Lolth. Seeing Moander's portfolio unused by Finder, she took the name of Moaner as her aspect to spread the worship beyond Underdark. During the Time of Troubles, which had shaken Toril in the, shortly after Moander's defeat, the followers of the Jawed God became desperate due to the disappearance of their deity and the cult's assassins. The church participated in numerous inept terrorist attacks and sabotage attempts against organizations that held power in the Realms and other churches. The attacks were filed by confusion and desperation and mirrored similar activities of the Cult of the Dragon, several thieves' guilds, and renegade cults of dark gods.

In the, an adventuring band of the Six Spiked Rings arrived to Ylraphon from Turmish to investigate rumors of the fallen House of Moander temple. The adventurers faced a greater darktentacles creature inside. Two of the Six Spiked Rings survived the encounter and emerged with sacks full of gems and magical metal wands.

Associated Orders

 * Nature's Reprisal, an organization that was said to be associated with the Church of Moander in the days of ancient Netheril. The Church, however, neither confirmed nor denied these rumors.

Notable Members of the Church of Moander

 * Coral, a saurial priestess, the Mouth of Moander circa the Time of Troubles, who was enslaved by Moander's seed and put out of her miserly by Dragonbait.

Appearances

 * Adventures
 * Curse of the Azure Bonds &bull; Tantras &bull; Undermountain: The Lost Level
 * Novels
 * Azure Bonds &bull; Song of the Saurials
 * The Simbul's Gift
 * Video Games
 * Curse of the Azure Bonds &bull; Pools of Darkness
 * Curse of the Azure Bonds &bull; Pools of Darkness