trancejeremy
Adventurer
Well, I think there are two ways to answer this
Firstly, D&D should simply focus on providing rules for adventuring classes. Non-cleric class priests and such should exist, but they don't need any special stats, since they won't be fighting or adventuring.
For instance, there isn't an specific class for Blacksmith or Sailor
Secondly. highly skilled NPCs should have some sort of class tailored to their ability. Which would include priests.
2e actually tried to address this to a degree, with the Specialty Priest, which were dramatically different depending on the god.
And even before that, in 1e, Len Lakofka came up with non adventuring clerics in Dragon Magazine #68
And proceeds to give a non-adventuring cleric, and a cloistered one, which doesn't fight well, but has some spell casting ability as well as sage abilities...
But Dragon did also have classes for a Smith
And people like to drag Paladins into this argument, but they were really knights, not "holy warriors". They were the peers of Charlemagne, essentially like the Knights of the Round Table.
One, Archbishop Turpin, was probably both. But Roland, Ogier the Dane and the others had no role in the Church.
Read Poul Anderson's 3 of Hearts, 3 of Lions, which is one of the most D&D novels there is. That is where the Paladin is from (as is the alignment system)
Firstly, D&D should simply focus on providing rules for adventuring classes. Non-cleric class priests and such should exist, but they don't need any special stats, since they won't be fighting or adventuring.
For instance, there isn't an specific class for Blacksmith or Sailor
Secondly. highly skilled NPCs should have some sort of class tailored to their ability. Which would include priests.
2e actually tried to address this to a degree, with the Specialty Priest, which were dramatically different depending on the god.
And even before that, in 1e, Len Lakofka came up with non adventuring clerics in Dragon Magazine #68
The AD&D game models its cleric after the medieval fighter cleric, à la Templar or Hospitlar. Yet we are all aware that all clerics, then and now, do not meet that standard. The AD&D game does not take into account scholarly (sometimes called cloistered) clerics, or brothers who are not ordained but have some clerical functions. I would like to fill in those two gaps and allow for regular clerics, as non-player characters, who do not meet the ability-score minimums for player character clerics.
And proceeds to give a non-adventuring cleric, and a cloistered one, which doesn't fight well, but has some spell casting ability as well as sage abilities...
But Dragon did also have classes for a Smith
And people like to drag Paladins into this argument, but they were really knights, not "holy warriors". They were the peers of Charlemagne, essentially like the Knights of the Round Table.
One, Archbishop Turpin, was probably both. But Roland, Ogier the Dane and the others had no role in the Church.
The cleric is the original holy warrior. I never got the paladin. Paladins were the worst thing that ever happened to the cleric class.
Read Poul Anderson's 3 of Hearts, 3 of Lions, which is one of the most D&D novels there is. That is where the Paladin is from (as is the alignment system)