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9 - Metamorphoses of Christ

from Part III - Metamorphoses

István Czachesz
Affiliation:
University of Heidelberg, Germany, and Ruhr University Bochum, Germany
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Summary

Equipped with a general knowledge of religious antiquity, nobody is surprised by the notion that deities can appear in the shape of animals. Zeus changed himself into a bull to abduct Europe, transformed into a white swan to approach Leda, and assumed the form of an eagle to seduce Ganymede. The Egyptian Thoth most often appeared as an ibis but occasionally transformed himself into a baboon. The ability of many Greek, Roman, Egyptian, and Mesopotamian deities to assume the shape of animals is well known and taken for granted.

Such ideas, however, are not readily associated with early Christian religion. The second-century apologists, for example, vehemently attacked the Greeks' inferior concepts of metamorphosis:

There are legends of the metamorphosis of men: with you the gods also are metamorphosed. Rhea becomes a tree; Zeus a dragon, on account of Persephone; the sisters of Phaethon are changed into poplars, and Leto into a bird of little value, on whose account what is now Delos was called Ortygia. A god, forsooth, becomes a swan, or takes the form of an eagle, and, making Ganymede his cupbearer, glories in a vile affection. How can I reverence gods who are eager for presents, and angry if they do not receive them? Let them have their Fate! I am not willing to adore wandering stars… Why have you robbed God? Why do you dishonor His workmanship? You sacrifice a sheep, and you adore the same animal.

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Chapter
Information
The Grotesque Body in Early Christian Literature
Hell, Scatology and Metamorphosis
, pp. 141 - 156
Publisher: Acumen Publishing
Print publication year: 2012

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  • Metamorphoses of Christ
  • István Czachesz, University of Heidelberg, Germany, and Ruhr University Bochum, Germany
  • Book: The Grotesque Body in Early Christian Literature
  • Online publication: 05 April 2014
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  • Metamorphoses of Christ
  • István Czachesz, University of Heidelberg, Germany, and Ruhr University Bochum, Germany
  • Book: The Grotesque Body in Early Christian Literature
  • Online publication: 05 April 2014
Available formats
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  • Metamorphoses of Christ
  • István Czachesz, University of Heidelberg, Germany, and Ruhr University Bochum, Germany
  • Book: The Grotesque Body in Early Christian Literature
  • Online publication: 05 April 2014
Available formats
×