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Fertility rite

Fertility rites or fertility cult are religious rituals that are intended to stimulate reproduction in humans or in the natural world.[1] Such rites may involve the sacrifice of "a primal animal, which must be sacrificed in the cause of fertility or even creation".[2]

Characteristics

"Fertility rites may occur in calendric cycles, as rites of passage within the life cycle, or as ad hoc rituals....Commonly fertility rituals are embedded within larger-order religions or other social institutions."[3]

As with cave pictures "[that] show animals at the point of mating...[and] served magic fertility rites", such rites are "...a form of sympathetic magic"[4] in which the forces of nature are to be influenced by the example acted out in the ritual. At times, "ceremonies intended to assure the fecundity of the earth or of a group of women...involve some form of phallic worship".[5]

Geographical varieties

Ancient Greece

Central to fertility rites in classical Greece was "Demeter, goddess of fertility... Her rites celebrated the procession of the seasons, the mystery of the plants and the fruits in their annual cycle of coming to be and passing away."[6] But most "women's festivals... related in some way to woman's proper function as a fertile being (which allowed her to promote the fertility of crops too, by sympathy)".[7]

Because of his link to the grape harvest, however, "it is not surprising to see Dionysus associated with Demeter and Kore in the Eleusinian Mysteries. For he, too, represented one of the great life-bringing forces of the world."[8]

Phoenicia

Ancient Phoenicia saw "a special sacrifice at the season of the harvest, to reawaken the spirit of the vine"; while the winter fertility rite to restore "the spirit of the withering vine" included as sacrifice "cooking a kid in the milk of its mother, a Canaanite custom which Mosaic law condemned and formally forbade".[9]

The death of Adonis – "a vegetation spirit who...was manifest in the seed of corn" – was marked by "the most beautiful of Phoenician festivals...celebrated immediately after the harvest".[10]

Australia

Durkheim explored Australian ceremonies "to assure the prosperity of the animal or vegetable species serving the clan as totem".[11] Such ceremonies took the form both of "oblations, whether bloody or otherwise", and of "rites which...consist in movements and cries whose object is to imitate the different aspects and attitudes of the animal whose reproduction is desired".[12]

Durkheim concluded that "as the rites, and especially those which are periodical, demand nothing more of nature than that it follow its ordinary course, it is not surprising that it should generally have the air of obeying them".[13]

Christian

In the parables of Jesus Christ, such as the Parable of the Sower, "the sower sows the word," where the seed is the word of God.[14] The parables of the mustard seed and the growing seed explain the kingdom of God in which growth is due to God and not to man and follows its own schedule .[15][16] In John 12:24[17] the death and resurrection of Jesus compared to the core, which falls to the ground and dies and then produces a lot of seeds. In many Christian traditions, Easter service at dawn, or the service of the Resurrection, is held in the Acre of God, where the bodies of the dead are "sown as a seed".[18]

Many fertility rites that have spiritual origins such as European Christians and Pagans drew their methods from "myths, imagery, and ritual practices from the religions".[19] Agricultural practices role in transforming “the wild” into habitable places were prevalent in (western). Alongside education and medicine, agriculture helped spread western power and influence through Christian missions.[20]

Arabia

Some authors believe that fertility rites took place around the Kaaba in pre-Islamic times. During the autumn pilgrimage to the Kaaba, rituals performed there included performing the circumambulation naked, holding vigil in front of Mount Arafat, giving offerings to the pillars at al-Mina, and offering sacrifices. According to Barnaby Rogerson, it is likely these rituals were a part of a fertility cult, ensuring continuation of the life-cycle. In the cult, a mother goddess represented by a trinity was worshiped, along with a heroic young god would die and be reborn in an unending cycle due to his father, the supreme god. This was symbolized by agriculture and movement of the celestial bodies in Arabia. Allat was the fertility goddess with al-Rabba (the sovereign), Manat and Al-Uzza being her epithets. Thuraiza or Muzdalifah was the heroic young god and Allah was the father. Benjamin Walker says the Kaaba was honored by orgies and that its name means "virgin". Fertility rites took place in the temples of the Great Goddess and the color green was associated with her.[21][22]

Islamic traditions

It is believed in some Islamic traditions that a tree transfers its blessings (barakah) and thus trees were planted on graves. The custom of beating people with twigs is derived from an old fertility rite, with the tree transferring its life force. This practice was performed in medieval Egypt, particularly in Cairo by a jester called the 'Ifrit al-mahmal, when the mahmal carrying the covering of the Kaaba was exhibited. A similar practice also happens in the Deccan region of India during Muharram. Pilgrims to Mecca and tombs of saints are also garlanded since it is believed they preserve the life force of a tree.[23]

Mesoamerica

Agricultural fertility was and continues to be of primary concern for Mesoamerican cultures. Many ritual activities performed by Indigenous communities in Mesoamerica were directed to deities of land and rain, as their understanding of fertility was intimately related to specific geographical attributes, such as bodies of water, mountains, and caves. In Mesoamerican worldview, agricultural success was believed to be directly related to survival and prosperity. For this reason, ceremonies and religious rites offered to rain and earth deities were an integral part of most aspects of their socioreligious organization. Archaeological evidence throughout Mesoamerica attests to the magnanimous importance of fertility rituals for the Olmec, Maya, and Aztec civilizations.[24]

Contemporary analogues

  • It has been suggested that "at the heart of the myth of science lie fertility rites which ensure the continued fruitfulness of technological innovation".[25]
  • Eric Berne points out that "the Adult 'helpnik' vocabularies (PTA, psychology, psychoanalysis, social science) may be used in an intellectual Rite of Spring, where the victim's dismembered psyche is left scattered over the floor on the theory that he will eventually join himself together and be more fertile afterwards".[26]
  • Modern wedding ritual is seen by Freud as a kind of ritual orgy.[27]

Literature: T. S. Eliot

In The Waste Land, "Eliot waxes nostalgic for a classical society founded upon ritual praxis...fertility rites in which the participants mime the fall and return of natural cycles"[28] – "Keeping time, Keeping their rhythm in their dancing As in their living in the living seasons",[29] as he would subsequently put it.

See also

References

  1. ^ Ananti, Emmanuel (January 1986). AnthonyBonanno (ed.). Archaeology and Fertility Cult in the Ancient Mediterranean: First International Conference on Archaeology of the Ancient Mediterranean. B R Gruner Publishing. ISBN 9789027272539.
  2. ^ Aniela Jaffé, in C. G. Jung, Man and his Symbols (1978) p. 264
  3. ^ Thomas Barfield, The Dictionary of Anthropology (1997) p. 184
  4. ^ Jaffé, p. 261
  5. ^ Willard Bohn, Apollinaire and the Faceless Man (1991) p. 66
  6. ^ M. I. Finley, The World of Odysseus (Penguin 1967) p. 158
  7. ^ J. Boardman et al, eds., The Oxford History of the Classical World (Oxford 1991) p. 269–70
  8. ^ F. Guirand ed., The New Larousse Encyclopedia of Mythology (1968) p. 160
  9. ^ Guirand, p. 77–9
  10. ^ Guirand, p. 81–2
  11. ^ Emile Durkheim, The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life (London 1971) p. 327
  12. ^ Durkheim, p. 351
  13. ^ Durkheim, p. 361
  14. ^ Barnes, Charles Randall (1912). The People's Bible Encyclopedia: Biographical, Geographical, Historical, and Doctrinal : Illustrated by Nearly Four Hundred Engravings, Maps, Chats, Etc. People's Publication Society.
  15. ^ Longenecker, Richard N. (2000). The Challenge of Jesus' Parables. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8028-4638-9.
  16. ^ Edwards, James R. (2002). The Gospel According to Mark. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8028-3734-9.
  17. ^ "John 12:24 Truly, truly, I tell you, unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a seed; but if it dies, it bears much fruit". biblehub.com. Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  18. ^ "Definition of DIASPORA". www.merriam-webster.com. Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  19. ^ "Ancient Roots, Historical Challenges". pluralism.org. Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  20. ^ Sundkler, Bengt; Steed, Christopher (2000-05-04). A History of the Church in Africa. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-58342-8.
  21. ^ Rogerson, Barnaby (4 November 2010). The Prophet Muhammad: A Biography. Hachette UK. p. 22. ISBN 9780748124695. Retrieved 28 August 2019.
  22. ^ Maria Zalewski, Wojciech (13 February 2012). The Crucible of Religion: Culture, Civilization, and Affirmation of Life. Wipf and Stock. p. 269. ISBN 9781630875329. Retrieved 28 August 2019.
  23. ^ Schimmel, Annemarie. Deciphering the signs of God: a phenomenological approach to Islam. State University of New York Press. p. 19. Retrieved 28 August 2019.
  24. ^ Arnold, Philip P. "Fertility." In David Carrasco (ed). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures. : Oxford University Press, 2001
  25. ^ F. A Kreuzinger, The Religion of Science Fiction (1986) p. 42
  26. ^ Eric Berne, What Do You Say After You Say Hello? (1974) p. 325
  27. ^ Freud Sigmund (1953). On Sexuality Three Essays On The Theory Of Sexuality Vol-7.
  28. ^ E. P. Comentale, Modernism, Cultural Production, and the British Avant-Garde (2004) p. 96
  29. ^ T. S. Eliot, "East Coker", in The Complete Plays and Poems (London 1985) p. 178

External links

  • "Fertility rites"

fertility, rite, fertility, cult, religious, rituals, that, intended, stimulate, reproduction, humans, natural, world, such, rites, involve, sacrifice, primal, animal, which, must, sacrificed, cause, fertility, even, creation, contents, characteristics, geogra. Fertility rites or fertility cult are religious rituals that are intended to stimulate reproduction in humans or in the natural world 1 Such rites may involve the sacrifice of a primal animal which must be sacrificed in the cause of fertility or even creation 2 Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Geographical varieties 2 1 Ancient Greece 2 2 Phoenicia 2 3 Australia 2 4 Christian 2 5 Arabia 2 6 Islamic traditions 2 7 Mesoamerica 3 Contemporary analogues 4 Literature T S Eliot 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksCharacteristics Edit Fertility rites may occur in calendric cycles as rites of passage within the life cycle or as ad hoc rituals Commonly fertility rituals are embedded within larger order religions or other social institutions 3 As with cave pictures that show animals at the point of mating and served magic fertility rites such rites are a form of sympathetic magic 4 in which the forces of nature are to be influenced by the example acted out in the ritual At times ceremonies intended to assure the fecundity of the earth or of a group of women involve some form of phallic worship 5 Geographical varieties EditAncient Greece Edit Central to fertility rites in classical Greece was Demeter goddess of fertility Her rites celebrated the procession of the seasons the mystery of the plants and the fruits in their annual cycle of coming to be and passing away 6 But most women s festivals related in some way to woman s proper function as a fertile being which allowed her to promote the fertility of crops too by sympathy 7 Because of his link to the grape harvest however it is not surprising to see Dionysus associated with Demeter and Kore in the Eleusinian Mysteries For he too represented one of the great life bringing forces of the world 8 Phoenicia Edit Ancient Phoenicia saw a special sacrifice at the season of the harvest to reawaken the spirit of the vine while the winter fertility rite to restore the spirit of the withering vine included as sacrifice cooking a kid in the milk of its mother a Canaanite custom which Mosaic law condemned and formally forbade 9 The death of Adonis a vegetation spirit who was manifest in the seed of corn was marked by the most beautiful of Phoenician festivals celebrated immediately after the harvest 10 Australia Edit Durkheim explored Australian ceremonies to assure the prosperity of the animal or vegetable species serving the clan as totem 11 Such ceremonies took the form both of oblations whether bloody or otherwise and of rites which consist in movements and cries whose object is to imitate the different aspects and attitudes of the animal whose reproduction is desired 12 Durkheim concluded that as the rites and especially those which are periodical demand nothing more of nature than that it follow its ordinary course it is not surprising that it should generally have the air of obeying them 13 Christian Edit In the parables of Jesus Christ such as the Parable of the Sower the sower sows the word where the seed is the word of God 14 The parables of the mustard seed and the growing seed explain the kingdom of God in which growth is due to God and not to man and follows its own schedule 15 16 In John 12 24 17 the death and resurrection of Jesus compared to the core which falls to the ground and dies and then produces a lot of seeds In many Christian traditions Easter service at dawn or the service of the Resurrection is held in the Acre of God where the bodies of the dead are sown as a seed 18 Many fertility rites that have spiritual origins such as European Christians and Pagans drew their methods from myths imagery and ritual practices from the religions 19 Agricultural practices role in transforming the wild into habitable places were prevalent in western Alongside education and medicine agriculture helped spread western power and influence through Christian missions 20 Arabia Edit Some authors believe that fertility rites took place around the Kaaba in pre Islamic times During the autumn pilgrimage to the Kaaba rituals performed there included performing the circumambulation naked holding vigil in front of Mount Arafat giving offerings to the pillars at al Mina and offering sacrifices According to Barnaby Rogerson it is likely these rituals were a part of a fertility cult ensuring continuation of the life cycle In the cult a mother goddess represented by a trinity was worshiped along with a heroic young god would die and be reborn in an unending cycle due to his father the supreme god This was symbolized by agriculture and movement of the celestial bodies in Arabia Allat was the fertility goddess with al Rabba the sovereign Manat and Al Uzza being her epithets Thuraiza or Muzdalifah was the heroic young god and Allah was the father Benjamin Walker says the Kaaba was honored by orgies and that its name means virgin Fertility rites took place in the temples of the Great Goddess and the color green was associated with her 21 22 Islamic traditions Edit It is believed in some Islamic traditions that a tree transfers its blessings barakah and thus trees were planted on graves The custom of beating people with twigs is derived from an old fertility rite with the tree transferring its life force This practice was performed in medieval Egypt particularly in Cairo by a jester called the Ifrit al mahmal when the mahmal carrying the covering of the Kaaba was exhibited A similar practice also happens in the Deccan region of India during Muharram Pilgrims to Mecca and tombs of saints are also garlanded since it is believed they preserve the life force of a tree 23 Mesoamerica Edit Agricultural fertility was and continues to be of primary concern for Mesoamerican cultures Many ritual activities performed by Indigenous communities in Mesoamerica were directed to deities of land and rain as their understanding of fertility was intimately related to specific geographical attributes such as bodies of water mountains and caves In Mesoamerican worldview agricultural success was believed to be directly related to survival and prosperity For this reason ceremonies and religious rites offered to rain and earth deities were an integral part of most aspects of their socioreligious organization Archaeological evidence throughout Mesoamerica attests to the magnanimous importance of fertility rituals for the Olmec Maya and Aztec civilizations 24 Contemporary analogues EditIt has been suggested that at the heart of the myth of science lie fertility rites which ensure the continued fruitfulness of technological innovation 25 Eric Berne points out that the Adult helpnik vocabularies PTA psychology psychoanalysis social science may be used in an intellectual Rite of Spring where the victim s dismembered psyche is left scattered over the floor on the theory that he will eventually join himself together and be more fertile afterwards 26 Modern wedding ritual is seen by Freud as a kind of ritual orgy 27 Literature T S Eliot EditIn The Waste Land Eliot waxes nostalgic for a classical society founded upon ritual praxis fertility rites in which the participants mime the fall and return of natural cycles 28 Keeping time Keeping their rhythm in their dancing As in their living in the living seasons 29 as he would subsequently put it See also EditDescent to the underworld Hieros gamos Khalid Nabi Cemetery Life death rebirth deity List of fertility deities Obando Fertility Rites Beltane Maypole Mother goddess Phallic processions Sacred prostitution SparagmosReferences Edit Ananti Emmanuel January 1986 AnthonyBonanno ed Archaeology and Fertility Cult in the Ancient Mediterranean First International Conference on Archaeology of the Ancient Mediterranean B R Gruner Publishing ISBN 9789027272539 Aniela Jaffe in C G Jung Man and his Symbols 1978 p 264 Thomas Barfield The Dictionary of Anthropology 1997 p 184 Jaffe p 261 Willard Bohn Apollinaire and the Faceless Man 1991 p 66 M I Finley The World of Odysseus Penguin 1967 p 158 J Boardman et al eds The Oxford History of the Classical World Oxford 1991 p 269 70 F Guirand ed The New Larousse Encyclopedia of Mythology 1968 p 160 Guirand p 77 9 Guirand p 81 2 Emile Durkheim The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life London 1971 p 327 Durkheim p 351 Durkheim p 361 Barnes Charles Randall 1912 The People s Bible Encyclopedia Biographical Geographical Historical and Doctrinal Illustrated by Nearly Four Hundred Engravings Maps Chats Etc People s Publication Society Longenecker Richard N 2000 The Challenge of Jesus Parables Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 0 8028 4638 9 Edwards James R 2002 The Gospel According to Mark Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 0 8028 3734 9 John 12 24 Truly truly I tell you unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies it remains only a seed but if it dies it bears much fruit biblehub com Retrieved 2021 11 17 Definition of DIASPORA www merriam webster com Retrieved 2021 11 17 Ancient Roots Historical Challenges pluralism org Retrieved 2021 11 17 Sundkler Bengt Steed Christopher 2000 05 04 A History of the Church in Africa Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 58342 8 Rogerson Barnaby 4 November 2010 The Prophet Muhammad A Biography Hachette UK p 22 ISBN 9780748124695 Retrieved 28 August 2019 Maria Zalewski Wojciech 13 February 2012 The Crucible of Religion Culture Civilization and Affirmation of Life Wipf and Stock p 269 ISBN 9781630875329 Retrieved 28 August 2019 Schimmel Annemarie Deciphering the signs of God a phenomenological approach to Islam State University of New York Press p 19 Retrieved 28 August 2019 Arnold Philip P Fertility In David Carrasco ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures Oxford University Press 2001 F A Kreuzinger The Religion of Science Fiction 1986 p 42 Eric Berne What Do You Say After You Say Hello 1974 p 325 Freud Sigmund 1953 On Sexuality Three Essays On The Theory Of Sexuality Vol 7 E P Comentale Modernism Cultural Production and the British Avant Garde 2004 p 96 T S Eliot East Coker in The Complete Plays and Poems London 1985 p 178External links Edit Fertility rites Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fertility rite amp oldid 1127688465, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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