I originally happened across an idea yesterday (well not yesterday but in a yesterday prior) while I was reading up on the gods of Cyrodiil: The spheres of the gods could (and needs) to be expanded, perhaps to absurd dimensions, if need be. After all, when we view the deities of Nirn in their ethnocentric, religiously exclusionary contexts, there are, indeed, so few to choose from. Or, speaking from a utilitarian position, the mundane focus of the gods, as set by their divine "sphere", is far to narrow to consider in many, if not most, situations; the Grey-Maybe having far too many shades as to be portrayed by all the works of all the 9 or so artists (plus 17). So of extending the pantheons, I say nay (for obvious reasons). But of extending their spheres, to draw in a wider temporal world, I say yay. So I thought it best to ask my fellow lore-forum hedonists for their wanton speculation on the subject. Can we expand their spheres, and if so, where and how?
To give an example (and origin) to this discussion (taken from the Imperial Library):
Kynareth is the strongest of the Sky spirits and is the deity of the heavens, the winds, the elements, and the unseen spirits of the air. Patron of sailors and travelers, Kynareth is invoked for auspicious stars at birth and for good fortune in daily life. In some legends, she is the first to agree to Lorkhan's plan to invent the mortal plane, and provides the space for its creation in the void. She is also associated with rain, a phenomenon said not to occur before the removal of Lorkhan's divine spark.
Here you can see Kynareth depicted in a straightforward manner. We are told who Kynareth is a patron of, and what her sphere is. But what I want all of you to do is dig a little deeper and expand upon what is already there. Take the last two sentences of the description and consider what they mean for who Kynareth is. For one, she's the patron of Lorkhan. She supports his idea and gives him a place to carry it out. For another, could she be a patron of landowners and landownership? And given landownership's historical connection to citizenship in our own reality (if perhaps not Nirn's) maybe she governs citizenship? The freedman? Keeping the last sentence in mind, could she also govern grief and act as the patron of widows and widowers? Of soldier's wives? Of farming (if Zenithar was too wrapped up in mercantile ideals)?