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BAPTISM AND THE PAGAN MYSTERIES IN THE FOURTH CENTURY

BAPTISM AND THE PAGAN MYSTERIES IN THE FOURTH CENTURY Footnotes 2 Tōn phriktōn kai aporrhērtōn mystēriōn ( Catechetical Homilies [Wenger] 6.15). 3 Tōn phriktōt kai hagian mystagagian (Catechesis 2[3].5 [Papadopoulos‐Kerameus p. 1721). 4 Tēn apangelian tōn mystikon rhemation ekeinon kai phoberon, kai tous phriktous kanonas tōn ek tou ouranou katenechthenton dogmatōn. In 1 Cor 40.1 (PG 61.348). 5 Tēs hagias kai phrikodestatōs prokeimenis thysiar (Mystagogic Catechesis , 5.9). I assume here Cyril's authorship. See my paper to be published in Studia Patristica , the proceedings of the 1971 International Patristic Conference at Oxford. 6 Emballein ton phobon (Procat. 9). 7 Metelthe ton phobon (ibid., 13). 8 Pantōn hosa theia anthrōpois tauton phrikadestaton te kai phaidrotaton (Eleusinios , 256 [Keil 2.28]). 1 Cf. G. Mylonas, Eleusis and the Eleusinian Mysteries (Princeton and London, 1962). 2 This ceremony is depicted on the Lovatelli Urn (Mylonas, fig. 83) and the Torre Nova sarcophagus (ibid., fig. 84). M. P. Nilsson, Geschichte der griechischen Religion , Munich, 1967 (third ed.), vol. I, p. 657, concluded that this rite was regularly included in the Greater Mysteries. Mylonas, however, believes that the candidate on the urn is shown by the skin he first wears then sits on to be Heracles (pp.205–6). He suggests that http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Heythrop Journal Wiley

BAPTISM AND THE PAGAN MYSTERIES IN THE FOURTH CENTURY

The Heythrop Journal , Volume 13 (3) – Jul 1, 1972

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Publisher
Wiley
Copyright
Copyright © 1972 Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
ISSN
0018-1196
eISSN
1468-2265
DOI
10.1111/j.1468-2265.1972.tb00686.x
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Footnotes 2 Tōn phriktōn kai aporrhērtōn mystēriōn ( Catechetical Homilies [Wenger] 6.15). 3 Tōn phriktōt kai hagian mystagagian (Catechesis 2[3].5 [Papadopoulos‐Kerameus p. 1721). 4 Tēn apangelian tōn mystikon rhemation ekeinon kai phoberon, kai tous phriktous kanonas tōn ek tou ouranou katenechthenton dogmatōn. In 1 Cor 40.1 (PG 61.348). 5 Tēs hagias kai phrikodestatōs prokeimenis thysiar (Mystagogic Catechesis , 5.9). I assume here Cyril's authorship. See my paper to be published in Studia Patristica , the proceedings of the 1971 International Patristic Conference at Oxford. 6 Emballein ton phobon (Procat. 9). 7 Metelthe ton phobon (ibid., 13). 8 Pantōn hosa theia anthrōpois tauton phrikadestaton te kai phaidrotaton (Eleusinios , 256 [Keil 2.28]). 1 Cf. G. Mylonas, Eleusis and the Eleusinian Mysteries (Princeton and London, 1962). 2 This ceremony is depicted on the Lovatelli Urn (Mylonas, fig. 83) and the Torre Nova sarcophagus (ibid., fig. 84). M. P. Nilsson, Geschichte der griechischen Religion , Munich, 1967 (third ed.), vol. I, p. 657, concluded that this rite was regularly included in the Greater Mysteries. Mylonas, however, believes that the candidate on the urn is shown by the skin he first wears then sits on to be Heracles (pp.205–6). He suggests that

Journal

The Heythrop JournalWiley

Published: Jul 1, 1972

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