 |
|
| |
|
 |
 |
at Global Oneness Community.
Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum
|
 |
Dionysus - Parallels with Christianity |  | Dionysus - Parallels with Christianity: Encyclopedia II - Dionysus - Parallels with Christianity |  | It is possible that Dionysian mythology would later find its way into Christianity. There are many parallels between Dionysus and Jesus; both were said to have been born from a mortal woman but fathered by a god, to have returned from the dead, and to have transformed water into wine. The modern scholar Barry Powell also argues that Christian notions of eating and drinking "the flesh" and "blood" of Jesus was influenced by the cult of Dionysus. Certainly the Dionysus myth contains a great deal of cannibalism, in its links to Ino (however, on ...
See also:Dionysus, Dionysus - Worship, Dionysus - Bacchanalia, Dionysus - Appellations, Dionysus - Birth, Dionysus - Childhood, Dionysus - Midas, Dionysus - Other stories, Dionysus - Consorts/Children, Dionysus - Parallels with Christianity, Dionysus - Modern interpretations, Dionysus - Dionysus in Neopaganism, Dionysus - names with the origin Dionysus, Dionysus - Bibliography |  | | Dionysus, Dionysus - Appellations, Dionysus - Bacchanalia, Dionysus - Bibliography, Dionysus - Birth, Dionysus - Childhood, Dionysus - Consorts/Children, Dionysus - Dionysus in Neopaganism, Dionysus - Midas, Dionysus - Modern interpretations, Dionysus - Other stories, Dionysus - Parallels with Christianity, Dionysus - Worship, Dionysus - names with the origin Dionysus |  | |
|  |  | Dionysus: Encyclopedia II - Dionysus - Parallels with Christianity
Dionysus - Parallels with Christianity
It is possible that Dionysian mythology would later find its way into Christianity. There are many parallels between Dionysus and Jesus; both were said to have been born from a mortal woman but fathered by a god, to have returned from the dead, and to have transformed water into wine. The modern scholar Barry Powell also argues that Christian notions of eating and drinking "the flesh" and "blood" of Jesus was influenced by the cult of Dionysus. Certainly the Dionysus myth contains a great deal of cannibalism, in its links to Ino (however, one must note that Dionysian cannibalism has no correlation with self-sacrifice as a means of propitiation). Dionysus was also distinct among Greek gods, as a deity commonly felt within individual followers. In a less benign example of influence on Christianity, Dionysus' followers, as well as another god, Pan, are said to have had the most influence on the modern view of Satan as animal-like and horned.2 It is also possible these similarities between Christianity and Dionysiac religion are all only representations of the same common religious archetypes. Furthermore, it is worth noting that the story of Jesus turning water into wine is only found in the Gospel of John, which differs on many points from the other Synoptic Gospels. That very passage, it has been suggested, was incorporated into the Gospel from an earlier source focusing on Jesus' miracles. 3
According to Martin A. Larson in The Story of Christian Origins (1977), Osiris was the first savior, and all soteriology in the region borrowed this religion, directly and indirectly, including Mithraism and Christianity, from an Osirian-Dionysian influence. As with their common dying and resurrected saviors, they all share common sacraments, ostensibly grounded in their reliance on seasonal cereal agriculture, having adopted the rituals with the food itself. Larson notes that Herodotus uses the names Osiris and Dionysus interchangeably and Plutarch identifies them as the same, while the name was anciently thought to originate from the place Nysa, in Egypt (now Ethiopia).
The subject of Dionysus is complex and baffling. The problem is further complicated by the fact that he appears in at least four characters: first, as the respectable patron of the theatre and the arts; second, as the effeminate, yet fierce and phallic mystery-god of the bloodthirsty Maenads; third, as the mystic deity in the temples of Demeter; and fourth, as the divine savior who died for mankind and whose body and blood were symbolically eaten and drunk in the eucharist of the Orphic-Pythagorean celibates. Beyond this, almost all barbarian nations had their own versions of Dionysius under many names. And yet there is a simpler explanation: Dionysus, Bromius, Sabazius, Attis, Adonis, Zalmoxis, Corybas, Serapis, and Orpheus himself are replicas of their grand prototype Osiris; and the variations which appear among them resulted from the transplantation of the god from one country to another, and reflect simply the specific needs of his multifarious worshipers (37-38).
Other related archives1640, 17, 186 BC, 200 BC, Achilles, Acis, Acoetes, Adonis, Agave, Aglaea, Ampelos, Anatolia, Ancient Greek, Ancient Greek religion, Aphrodite, Apollo, Apollodorus, Arabia, Archelaus, Argonauts, Ariadne, Athena, Athens, Attis, Aventine Hill, Bacchanalia, Bacchus, Cadmus, Calabria, Callimachus, Callirhoe, Calydonian, Charites, Christianity, Cybele, Demeter, Dionysia, Dionysian Mysteries, Dionysius, Earth-gods, Eddie Campbell, Egypt, Eleusinian, Eleusinian Mysteries, Eleusis, Eleutherios, Eros, Ethiopia, Etruria, Euphrosyne, Euripides, Friedrich Nietzsche, Gorgon, Gospel of John, Greece, Greek, Greek mythology, Hephaestus, Hera, Heracles, Herodotus, Hittites, Homer, Hyades, Hyades star cluster, Hymenaios, Iacchus, Ino, Italy, James Frazer, Jason, Jesus, Karl Kerenyi, King Pentheus, Labors, Lenaia, Liber Pater, Libera, Libya, Linear B, Livy, Lycurgus, Macedon, Maenad, Maenads, March 16, March 17, Maro, Martin A. Larson, Midas, Midas Touch, Minotaur, Mithraism, Mycenean, Mysteries, Neopagans, Nonnus, Nysa, Nyx, Odysseus, Odyssey, Oedipus, Oeneus, Oenopion, Olympian tradition, Olympians, Orpheus, Osiris, Pactolus, Pan, Pentheus, Persephone, Perseus, Phrygia, Phrygian, Phthonus, Plutarch, Priapus, Primordial gods, Rhea, Roman mythology, Roman pantheon, Rome, Sabazios, Sabazius, Satan, Satyrs, Sea-gods, Semele, Senate, Serapis, Sicilian, Silenus, Synoptic Gospels, Thalia, The Bacchae, The Birth of Tragedy, Thebes, Themis, Theseus, Thetis, Thrace, Thracian, Titans, Triptolemus, Trojan War, United States, Vienna, Vyacheslav Ivanov, Zagreus, Zalmoxis, Zeus, agriculture, animal, archetypes, bull, cannibalism, centaurs, civilization, comic book, cosmogony, dolphins, dragons, fox, graphic novel, horned, intoxicating, ivy, lawgiver, life-death-rebirth deity, mystery religions, mystery religious rites, nymphs, oracle, peace, phallic, satyr, satyrs, sects, serpent, shovel, sileni, soteriology, super-hero, syncretism, theater, thyrsus, wine, ιακχος
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Parallels with Christianity", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
|
|
More material related to Dionysus can be found here:
|
|
« Back
|
Search the Global Oneness web site |
|
|
|
|
 |
Sneak-Peek of Global Oneness Community
Hi friend! The Global Oneness Community, the place for information and sharing about Oneness is not really launched yet (you will see there is still some clean up to do) ...but it is now open for a sneak-peek! And if you wish - please register and become one of the very first members to do so! Jonas
Forum Home,
Articles,
Photo Gallery,
Videos,
News,
Sitemap
...and much more!
|