Basic Guidelines for Covens

The word "coven" comes from the Latin conventus: gathering, assembly. Same root as "convention" and "covenant." It's one of the oldest forms of organised spiritual practice known to humanity.

Purpose

The combined spiritual force of a group working in harmony produces results that far exceed the capacity of any solitary practitioner. A ritual performed collectively carries a weight that the same ritual performed alone simply cannot match.

But the Coven's value goes deeper than force multiplication. It's a family. The bonds formed through shared practice, shared devotion, and shared difficulty are among the most profound a human being can experience. The Gods were worshipped in communities for millennia. The Coven returns this ancient pattern to the present.

Every Coven of the Temple serves 3 functions: advancing the souls of its members, performing the Zevist Rituals collectively, and building genuine spiritual community in the physical world.

Size

3 to 13 members. Fewer than 3 and the collective energy can't generate sufficient force. More than 13 and coordination begins to fragment.

If a Coven grows past 13 active members, it should divide into 2, each maintaining connection with the Temple. 5 deeply committed practitioners who attend every gathering will accomplish more than 20 casual participants who drift in and out. Consistency outperforms size.

Structure

Every Coven has a leader (High Priest or High Priestess) responsible for organising meetings, leading rituals, mentoring members, and maintaining communication with the central Temple.

The leader serves the group. Authority flows from the Temple through the leader to the members; it doesn't originate in the leader's personality or personal claims. Minimum qualifications: at least 1 year of consistent personal practice, solid knowledge of the Temple's doctrines and rituals, and the temperament to guide others without seeking control over them.

Discretion

Common sense applies. Don't publicise meeting locations on open social media. Don't share members' identities without their explicit permission. Don't invite unknown individuals without proper vetting.

What's shared in the Coven stays in the Coven. Personal details disclosed in sacred space are treated as sacred. Breaking a member's confidence undermines the group's foundation. This is grounds for removal.

Connection to the Temple

Register with the Ministry. Maintain regular communication. Ensure all members participate in the broader community: the Forums, the official platforms, the Rituals.

A Coven that drifts into isolation drifts, sooner or later, into distortion. Connection to the source is what keeps the practice clean.

The Coven as a Living Reservoir

Over months of consistent gatherings, a Coven develops a collective aura: a reservoir of spiritual energy that builds with every meeting, every ritual, every meditation performed in unison. Individual members can draw upon this reservoir to reinforce their own work in times of need.

This only happens through regularity. Sporadic meetings produce sporadic energy. Commit to a schedule, honour it, and after 6 months you'll walk into the room and feel the accumulated force before anyone lights a candle. That's real. That's the Coven working as it was meant to.