Leaving the christian egregore, leaving Christianity. Undergo a ritual of debaptism. Leaving Christianity does not release you from responsibility towards the child.
Leaving Christianity
If you have left the Christian egregore, this does not mean that your child has also left it. If the child was baptized, then according to that ritual it is considered that the biological parents relinquish certain rights over the child, and those rights pass to the godparents. Therefore, if the child later wishes to do so, they would need to undergo a ritual of de-baptism themselves.
If a child has already been baptized, then for the time being it is, in a sense, a one-way path. From that point onward, the matter will depend upon the individual’s own free will. You can make this path easier for the child if, first, you yourself no longer remain within that system, and second, if none of your relatives — including the godparents — continue taking the child to obligatory ritual observances: communion, confession, and other practices that further reinforce the connection.
“If a person attempting to leave the Christian egregore is also a godparent, does this complicate the situation further, and must they still repay or fulfill obligations connected to their godchild?”
In this case, even if you are leaving the Christian egregore, you still do not have the right, as a warrior, to abandon your obligations. If you once agreed to participate in a child’s baptism, then you must understand that, in a certain sense, you became more of a parent to that child than even the biological parents themselves. The fact that you are leaving Christianity does not release you from responsibility — on the contrary, it intensifies it. For now, the fulfillment of this obligation becomes a matter of personal duty.
Godparents often behave as though the ceremony meant nothing, when in reality it does carry significance. One must care for and guide the child as if they were one’s own, and do so with even greater awareness. These are obligations that you once willingly accepted, and they must be fulfilled — even if the one before whom you once swore those vows is no longer your sovereign. Yet the obligations themselves remain, especially toward the person who, in some sense, depends upon you. And perhaps now, those responsibilities are even greater than before.
Additional Information:
Literary Sources:
Video Materials:
Educational Materials:
- 1st Course. Etheric body. All seminars
- Book. Intricacies of Fate, or What Dimension Do You Live In?
- Book. Goals and Values. How to Stop Beint Like Everyone Else
