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The Religionsgeschichtliche Schule, Fifty Years Later
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 October 2008
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The religionsgeschichtliche Schule, born in Germany towards the end of the XIXth century, rapidly met with considerable success throughout the world of scholarship. It reached its zenith during the first decennia of the present century, when it played a leading part in the study of Christian origins, and began to fall out of favour shortly after World War I. Alfred Loisy's Les Mystères païens et le mystère chrétien, first published in 1919 and re-edited in 1930, represents one of its most significant and also one of its last productions. Very few scholars, if any, would be willing nowadays to enlist under its banner. And yet there can be little doubt that this school, despite its obvious shortcomings and unwarranted systematisations, has, in its time, done the cause of learning signal service.
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References
page 136 note 1 ‘L'Hermétisme’, , Revue Biblique, 1926, p. 264.Google Scholar
page 136 note 2 The so-called mythological school, which denies the historicity of the figure of Jesus, and whose publications always cause a sensation among the ill-informed public, may be considered, at least in its more recent forms, an outgrowth of the religionsgeschichtliche Schule. It makes abundant use of the comparison between early Christianity and the mystery religions and considers Jesus as just one among many mythical saviours: cf. Couchoud, P. L., Le Dieu Jésus, Paris, 1951.Google Scholar
page 137 note 1 ‘Avec un langage tout différent de celui de Jésus, Paul retrouve les affirmations essentielles de son Maître’: Trocmé, E., Histoire des Religions (Encyclopédie de la Pléiade), II, Paris, 1972, p. 214.Google Scholar
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page 137 note 3 Cf. amongst others, J., Murphy O'Connor (ed.), Paul and Qumran, London, 1968.Google Scholar It must not, however, be forgotten that the Essene movement itself was, perhaps deeply, influenced by non-Jewish thought.
page 137 note 4 Bousset, W., Kyrios Christos, Göttingen, 1913.Google Scholar
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page 139 note 2 Justin Martyr, addressing Antoninus and his imperial associates and speaking of the Mithraic meal, alludes to the words pronounced on that occasion which, he says, ‘you know or may learn’, obviously without being initiated: I Apol., 66, 4.
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page 143 note 1 Metam. xi, 23.
page 143 note 2 The meal mentioned in Metam. xi, 24 as taking place on two successive days is just a joyful banquet which follows the initiation; it is no integral part of it and seems to be a semi-religious and semi-profane function: Apuleius describes it in turn as suaves epulae, faceta convivia, jentaeulum religiosum.
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