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Oryginalność kultu Maryi z Nazaretu na tle kultów Wielkiej Matki (prahistoria, mity, kulty historyczne Bogini-Dziewicy i Bogini-Matki)

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dc.contributor.author Kasprzak, Dariusz
dc.date.accessioned 2023-02-02T09:07:10Z
dc.date.available 2023-02-02T09:07:10Z
dc.date.issued 2011
dc.identifier.citation Polonia Sacra, 2011, R. 15 (33), Nr 28 (72), s. 123-158. pl_PL
dc.identifier.issn 1428-5673
dc.identifier.uri http://repozytorium.theo-logos.pl/xmlui/handle/123456789/3460
dc.description.abstract By employing theology, history, archeology, study of religions and psychoanalysis I have tried to describe the theological originality of the cult of Mary from Nazareth against a background of the different cults of the Great Mother. I referred to many branches of science in order to provide a thorough investigation of the problem. Different ranges of meaning learned from many approaches to that question however, resulted in theological explanation. If we compare the prehistoric cult of womanhood in the religions of the great Mother with Marian veneration it is clearly visible that St Mary was never worshipped as a Christian personification of fertility or regarded as a Christian Earth Mother, or Mother that planted seeds. She was never connected with any cyclic vegetation, fecundity or the rhythm of birth and death cult. As the obedient servant, Mary from Nazareth found Her liturgical cult, which reminds believers of God’s work of salvation. The Virgin Mary was never venerated as a dual-sexed deity or connected with any vegetation cult. Mary from Nazareth is adored as an historic person, the earthly M other of the Incarnated Word. From a sociological point of view, matriarchy isn’t an essential feature of Christianity. For that reason woman isn’t the embodiment of the deity. Christians venerate the Virgin Mary as the earthly Mother of the Incarnated Word i.e. Mother of the Second Person of the Trinity. She was an obedient servant of the Lord and was never venerated as a deity. In Christianity, St. Mary didn’t present the primary supernatural, physical or magical power as it was in the religious of Bronze Age. The Collyridians episode which worshipped Mary, Mother of Jesus as goddess was an isolated sectarian movement existing on the outskirts of Christianity in the 4lh century. Apart from the Collyridians heresy, the drift to female priesthood never existed in Christianity as it did in the religions of Great Mother (Vestal Virgins) or in the cults of Fertility Goddesses (priestess of Ishtar or Aphrodite). It is impossible to find any links or parallels between ancient mythological goddesses and the Marian cult. St Mary unlike in the womanhood cult of the Bronze Age was a divine protector of love or fertility. If the cult of St Mary is clearly connected with motherhood it has in no way a sexual aspect. Her veneration points at the timeless female features of the virgin and mother common to all mankind. For Christians, the pagan cults of goddesses were regarded as cults of demonic idolatry. They were definitely condemned by the Old Testament judges and prophets and rejected entirely by Church Fathers. Theodosius the Great officially banned all forms of pagan cults (edict of 392). Certainly some external pagan rituals existed in the gestures and practices of inhabitants of the Roman Empire, which were only partially converted Christians, following numerous conversions to Christianity after 313. Christian veneration of Mary from Nazareth as the Virgin Mary and Mother of God is an original, autonomous cult. The veneration of St. Mary is subordinated to the superlative cult of God. Mary from Nazareth is not a God but a human being who fulfills a substantial role in the historical acts of Salvation prepared by God. She was never connected with any cosmic force .She has never performed any ritual magical practices to get in touch with a deity. By her free, permanent choice of God she bore utter moral responsibility. As a creation of God and the first made in Jesus Christ image, she first attained salvation. The Message of the Church concerning Maria from Nazareth didn’t use an acontextual, mythical language because it isn’t an universal religious myth but is the Churchs’ catechesis on the historical events. Mary from Nazareth is an historical person. With the mythological virgin-mother goddesses, St. Mary shares the common symbol of womanhood but only on the linguistic and anthropological layer of significance. The Marian cult isn’t a continuation of any previous pagan cult of goddesses. It is impossible because of the Christian doctrine - it would be idolatry. There is no historical evidence supporting such a supposition. Iconography doesn’t afford proofs also. The Marian cult and the ancient cults of the goddesses are doctrinally divergent and theologically incoherent. There is no historical continuity or coherence between them. en
dc.language.iso pl pl_PL
dc.publisher Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Papieskiego Jana Pawła II pl_PL
dc.rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Poland *
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/pl/ *
dc.subject Maryja pl_PL
dc.subject kult pl_PL
dc.subject kult Maryi pl_PL
dc.subject kulty antyczne pl_PL
dc.subject boginie pl_PL
dc.subject matka pl_PL
dc.subject kobiecość pl_PL
dc.subject Matka Ziemia pl_PL
dc.subject wierzenia starożytne pl_PL
dc.subject religie starożytne pl_PL
dc.subject religie pogańskie pl_PL
dc.subject archeologia pl_PL
dc.subject kultura pl_PL
dc.subject religioznawstwo pl_PL
dc.subject prehistoria pl_PL
dc.subject starożytność pl_PL
dc.subject historia pl_PL
dc.subject matriarchat pl_PL
dc.subject kapłanki pl_PL
dc.subject maskulinizacja religii pl_PL
dc.subject patriarchat pl_PL
dc.subject mit pl_PL
dc.subject mitologia pl_PL
dc.subject mitologia sumeryjska pl_PL
dc.subject mitologia babilońska pl_PL
dc.subject mitologia egipska pl_PL
dc.subject mitologie semickie pl_PL
dc.subject chrześcijaństwo pl_PL
dc.subject Mary en
dc.subject cult en
dc.subject cult of Mary en
dc.subject ancient cults en
dc.subject godesses en
dc.subject mother en
dc.subject femininity en
dc.subject Mother Earth en
dc.subject ancient religions en
dc.subject pagan religions en
dc.subject archeology en
dc.subject archaeology en
dc.subject culture en
dc.subject religious studies en
dc.subject prehistory en
dc.subject antiqity en
dc.subject history en
dc.subject matriarchy en
dc.subject priestesses en
dc.subject masculinization of religion en
dc.subject patriarchy en
dc.subject myth en
dc.subject mythology en
dc.subject Sumerian mythology en
dc.subject Babylonian mythology en
dc.subject Egyptian mythology en
dc.subject Semitic mythologies en
dc.subject Christianity en
dc.title Oryginalność kultu Maryi z Nazaretu na tle kultów Wielkiej Matki (prahistoria, mity, kulty historyczne Bogini-Dziewicy i Bogini-Matki) pl_PL
dc.title.alternative The Novelty of the cult of Mary from Nazareth vs. the Cult of the Great Mother (prehistory, myths, cults of the Virgin Goddesses and Mother Goddess) en
dc.type Article pl_PL


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