The Ancient Mysteries: A Sourcebook of Sacred Texts (Paperback)
$18.61 - Save $1.34 (6%) - RRP $19.95 Free shipping worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 48 hours | |Short Description for The Ancient Mysteries "A very balanced selection of sources for the study of the ancient so-called mystery religions, starting with Eleusis and ending with mysteries in Judaism and Christianity... No other modern sourcebook exists in this field."-Kurt Rudolph
Full description- Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
- Published: 09 April 1999
- Format: Paperback 280 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Folklore, Myths & Legends | General & World History | Comparative Religion | History Of Religion | Christianity | Spirituality & Religious Experience | Religious Institutions & Organizations
- ISBN 13: 9780812216929 ISBN 10: 081221692X
- Sales rank: 197,821
Full description for The Ancient Mysteries
Zeus and the other gods of shining Olympus were in reality divine only by popular consent. Over the course of time Olympian luster diminished in favor of religious experiences more immediate to the concerns of people living in an increasingly cosmopolitan ancient world. These experiences were provided by the mysteries, religions that flourished particularly during the Hellenistic period and were secretly practiced by groups of adherents who decided, through personal choice, to be initiated into the profound realities of one deity or another. Unlike the official state religions, in which people were expected to make an outward show of allegiance to the local gods, the mysteries emphasized an inwardness and privacy of worship within a closed band of initiates. In this book, Marvin W. Meyer explores the sacrifices and prayers, the public celebrations and secret ceremonies, the theatrical performances and literary works, the gods and goddesses that were a part of the mystery religions of Greece in the seventh century B.C. to the Judaism and Christianity of the Roman world of the seventh century A.D.

