Cornflorism
Cornflorism ia a sect of Florism primarily followed in East Pua, Pihi and Kyawcenni Pua. Cornfloristians worship all flowers but venerate the cornflower above all others. Modern Cornflorism originates in the merger of a Pihitian florist cult that worshipped the oxeye daisy and the growing popularity of a more traditional Cornflorism movement that put the cornflower above all other flowers. The Pihitians were amenable to having the oxeye daisy worshipped in a tandem, albeit lower, position seeing all other flowers in a lesser view than cornflowers and oxeye daisies.
Te Hae
All flowers are venerated under Cornflorism and are seen as an embodiment of, or physical conduit to, the energy of the Higher Order, often referred to as the 'Te Hae'. Cornflowers are seen as the flowers with the highest concentration of the Te Hae.
Many individual worshippers of Cornflorism choose to adorn their homes and businesses with cornflowers as a way to harness the Te Hae for prosperity, guidance, protection, and health. Another common use for cornflowers is to plant them onto the grave of a deceased loved one in order to allow the loved one to return to the higher order through the cornflower while also providing fertilization to the very flower itself, thus coffins are rarely used in burials.
The Higher Order
The Higher Order is considered by most Floristians to be the stage of existence after death that allows the dead to assist the living via fertilization. All living things return to the soil in death and the soil provides energy to the living through many facets.