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Covenant religion

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The Prophet of Truth attempts to activate the Halo Rings from the Ark.

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The Covenant Empire is founded on and united by a single religion, based upon the worship of the ancient race of beings known as the Forerunners. According to Covenant Religion, the Forerunners, being a nearly omniscient and all-powerful race, discovered a way to transcend the physical world and become divine beings, by building and activating seven huge ring-shaped devices called Halos, also referred to by the Covenant as "Sacred Rings". When this happened, the Halos uplifted the Forerunners into trans-sentience, but left all lesser, unworthy races behind. The Covenant (or at least the Prophets) believe themselves to be the chosen inheritors of the Forerunners, and seek to reclaim their lost technology and use all the "gifts" the Forerunners left behind. Their ultimate goal, however, is to locate and activate the Halo Installations. In doing so, they believe that all faithful adherents to the Covenant Religion will be uplifted as the Forerunners were, and become divine beings. All client races of the Covenant follow the Prophets in the hopes of also ascending into godhood.

On The Ark, during the Halo 3 campaign, several Terminals can be found left by the Forerunners, describing the activation of the Halo arrays as the "Great Journey." Through such terminals on other Forerunner installations, the Covenant may have learned of the name and used it to apply to their religion in yet another case of misinterpretation.

The Covenant's Beliefs

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The Covenant believe that the ancient race of beings known as the Forerunners ascended into divinity through the use of seven artifacts known as the Halo rings. The very fabric of the Covenant is built upon the goal of activating the Halos, believing this will be akin to following in the footsteps of the Forerunners and propel them into the "Divine Beyond", a heavenly paradise they will share with the Forerunners. All races who are non-believers or unworthy of the journey will be left behind.

The Covenant believe all Forerunner artifacts to be holy relics, and tampering with or destroying these relics is a sacrilege of the highest order. Indeed, one of the reasons behind the Covenant's genocidal war against humanity is that the High Prophet of Truth, unwilling to reveal to the Covenant that humans are the Forerunners' inheritors, claimed that the humans on Harvest had destroyed a cache of Forerunner artifacts. Humanity's research into Forerunner artifacts may also have contributed toward the Covenant's animosity.

The Sangheili were once the most devout believers in the Prophets' vision. The events at Delta Halo, and their replacement by the Brutes as the military backbone of the Covenant, however, have disillusioned them to the Great Journey, and they now actively oppose those that continue to believe in it.[1][2] It should also be noted that Truth told the Arbiter that he always felt the Elites "never believed in the promise of the Sacred Rings." Other constituent races of the Covenant have accepted the Great Journey as a belief, but their devotion to the religion varies. For the most part, the Yanme'e, Huragok, Lekgolo and Kig-yar species have little interest in religion, but follow the San'Shyuum's teaching nonetheless. The Jiralhanae are devout believers, as are most Unggoy.

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Prophets of Truth and Regret, with Mercy on the other side, rebuking the future Arbiter over his failure to save the first sacred ring.

The Arbiter

"Here rest the vanguard of the Great Journey, every Arbiter from first to last. Each one created and consumed in times of extraordinary crisis."
— The Prophet of Truth to the Arbiter.

The currently living Arbiter, who is either leading or is an important member of the separatist movement, knows the true function of the Halo installations. At first, he heard it from the Heretic Leader, and shortly after from the Gravemind and the Master Chief, but it seemed as though he refused to believe the truth at the time. However, after speaking with 343 Guilty Spark, a Monitor of the lost Installation 04 who is considered by the leading Covenant caste as one of the holy Oracles, he accepted it. Following this conversation, he, with the help of some UNSC troops, attempted to stop the Brute Chieftain Tartarus from activating Installation 05, and hence the entire remaining Halo network, at which he was partially successful; the activation was interrupted, but the array was put into standby status, allowing its remote detonation from the Ark. The Loyalists were eventually defeated, and the Great Journey was, to a certain degree, discarded as a religion.

The Heretic Rebellion

File:HereticLeaderFactOrFiction.jpg
Sesa 'Refumee, the leader of the Heretics.

"Ask the Oracle about Halo...how they would sacrifice us all for nothing!"
Sesa 'Refumee to the Arbiter.

A few of the Covenant, called the Heretics, were aware that the Halos, when activated, would destroy all sentient life in the galaxy, including themselves, thus starting the Great Journey. The Heretics were led by the Elite Sesa 'Refumee, who discovered the true purpose of Halo from 343 Guilty Spark and came to the realization that the Great Journey and the road to salvation was false. Rather than take the Covenant on a path to divinity, to activate the rings would mean the destruction of all sentient life within three radii of the galactic center. Heretics began openly preaching the truth about Halo to the rest of the Covenant. In response to this, the Prophets sent a group of Special Operations Elites and Grunts into their base, a Gas mine, accompanied by the new Arbiter, Thel 'Vadamee, to silence the Heretics. Sesa 'Refumee was killed by the Arbiter at the Threshold's Gas Mine before he could escape, and the heresy was put down.


Purpose

Delta Halo sends a signal to the other rings, signaling to put the array on standby.

"There are those who said this day would never come. What are they to say now?"
— The Prophet of Truth

As the Master Chief and UNSC discovered, the Halos were not built as religious icons and representations; they are galactic weapons of mass sterilization built by the Forerunners to contain a parasitic species-devouring race known as the Flood. After exhausting every strategic option to destroy the Flood, the Forerunners activated the rings, killing all sentient life within three radii of the galactic center, including those of their own kind within galaxy. This eventually starved and killed off the Flood.[3]

Originally, there was a planned, organized process by which the Forerunners would survive the activation (which relied at least partially on the Shield Worlds), but thanks to 032 Mendicant Bias's defection to the Flood at the end of the Forerunner-Flood War they were unable to do so, as Mendicant Bias had revealed their locations to the Flood.[4]

In the ensuing conflict as the Forerunners were forced to face the oncoming assault of the Mendicant Bias-led Flood armada on the Maginot Sphere, the Forerunners hand had been forced. Didact subsequently activated the rings, killing all sentients not stored on the Ark. This included the majority of the remaining Forerunners, which left an as-yet undescribed number of survivors to initiate the reseeding of life in the galaxy before initiating an exodus out of the Milky Way.[5]

Activation

"In a moment, I will light the rings! And all who believe... shall be saved!"
— The Prophet of Truth

The Prophet of Truth traveled to Earth to begin the Great Journey by activating the massive structure buried beneath New Mombasa which was once thought to be the Ark. However, the sole purpose of this unearthed construct was to generate a portal which leads to the true Ark, Installation 00, which lies 218 lightyears from the center of the Milky Way Galaxy and beyond the range of any of the Halo installations. [6]

The Prophet of Truth attempted to begin the Great Journey by forcing the captured Sergeant Johnson to activate the Ark, but was slain by the Arbiter, who stabbed Truth with an Energy Sword. The Master Chief shut down the Ark, once again stopping the "Great Journey."

Legacy

Following the Great Schism and the death of the Prophet of Truth, the Covenant effectively dissolved. For more than six years, the member species of the Covenant fought a brutal civil war. Immediately following Truth's death, the San 'Shyuum sought to save themselves from the rage of the Sangheili, and so provided the Jiralhanae with new weapons, ships and other tools to aid in their protection. During this period the Prophets, who already had been few in number, largely disappeared, leading to rumours that they had actually finally achieved the Great Journey.[7]

Even amongst the Covenant Separatists their ancient religion held for millennia was not completely abandoned. As one Sangheili Shipmaster believed, "he knew his gods were out there, but he had no idea what they wanted."[8] The species of the Covenant had always relied on the Prophets to lead them in spiritual matters. The devout Sangheili in particular had not had any need for their own religious leaders for centuries, and now found that no one among them had the knowledge or the ability to comprehend the will of the gods. For a people whose sole purpose had been enforcing their gods' will, this was terrifying.

This period can perhaps be understood as somewhat being akin the Protestant Reformation in Western Christianity. A loss of faith in a society's religious leaders did not lead to a complete abandonment of said religion's deities. Rather it led to a period of intense conflict as various factions began to develop their own new interpretations of ancient beliefs. Although the Sangheili no longer believed in the Prophets as the messengers of the gods or in the Great Journey as they had described it, they still believed in their gods.

Sources

  1. ^ Halo 2
  2. ^ Halo 3
  3. ^ Halo 2
  4. ^ Halo Encyclopedia, page 232.
  5. ^ Halo Encyclopedia; pages 16, 28, 171, and 289.
  6. ^ Halo 3, The Ark (Level)
  7. ^ Halo: Evolutions - Essential Tales of the Halo Universe, The Return, page 506
  8. ^ Halo: Evolutions - Essential Tales of the Halo Universe, The Return, page 507

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