Canonum De Lex Ecclesium
Canons of Ecclesiastical Law
III. Sacred
3.4 Sacrilege and UnHoliness
Article 90 - Curse
A Curse is a form of spell, designed to evoke a negative binding power, or harm. All Curses have two parts- the binding and the return. The binding is the spell evoked and the return is the response received once the curse has matured.
By the laws of the Divine, it is impossible to evoke a curse spell to bind without also evoking the return once the spell or curse spell has matured.
A maturing of a Curse may be brought about by the spell being completed as intended, or the spell being challenged by divine protest. However, the concept of a spell being broken is misleading as once invoked, a spell has energy and existence and cannot be "unmade", only redirected.
When a Curse matures, it returns to its maker for reckoning. Thus if a spell is invoked to hurt and for ill, the maturing shall see its maker receive such ill intent with interest.
Only when such spells and spell curses utilize deference and placement to channel returns to a holding state can the reckoning of curses and spells be temporarily suspended. However, the law of the Divine cannot be tricked and all spells and curses must mature eventually.
It is considered an injury to the Divine to curse and all members are forbidden to formally invoke great curses upon other immortal beings and spirits.
The spells and curses issued by the Roman Cult, the Sarmatians, their allies and minions are hereby considered dishonorable and unlawful to the Divine Creator as such curses and spells have been found to be invoked without fair notice, nor within the consistent laws of these entities, nor given fair time for maturity by using such trickery as to perpetually defer the maturing of spells and curses, thus seeking to avoid a day of reckoning.
Whereupon a notice of Divine Protest and Dishonor such as an Ecclesiastical Deed Poll is issued, such a sacred instrument shall automatically mature each and every curse issued by such wickedness and trickery returning all to their makers, or heirs and successors for accounting.