A Herman Ottó Múzeum évkönyve 49. (2010)

Orosz György: „Jézus egyszer templomba ment... "A „Második merseburgi ráolvasás" pogány-keresztény szövegvariánsai mint az elasztikus missziós stratégia hatékony eszközei

"JESUS WAS ONCE RIDING TO CHURCH..." Pagan-Christian textual variants of the "Second Merseburg Incantation" as effective means of the flexible mission strategy Through their formal conversion to Christianity the German tribes belonged to the community of Christian civilization. In the consciousness of the 'new people', however, Christian beliefs existed in combination with pagan myths, thus forming a specific ethos, a kind of pagan and Christian syncretism, which can distinctly be traced in various fields of their culture. Great masses of people retained their magical-mythological view of the world for centuries, although it was gradually extended to include Christian elements. Pagan-Christian syncretism had developed among the Anglo-Saxons earlier and it was transplanted, together with the well-tried methods of conversion, to the Germans. In their healing activities Christian priests and monks had to rival with pagan magicians as a heritage of the past. For a time in the beginning (for centuries!), the newly baptized people regarded their priests and monks as magicians. The magic spells of paganism were turned Christian by clerical leaders of the new religion, who substituted such important figures of Christian religion as Jesus, Maria and a variety of saints for pagan gods and goddesses. The Second Merseburg Incantation was reworded in a Christian spirit and had the Lord's Prayer as well as Ave Maria attached to it. Thus these prayers lost their original functions and became part of a series of magic texts. Knowing the Lord's Prayer was an essential condition of conversion to Christianity. Fonnál representatives of the Christian Church inculcated it in people's memory by attaching it to earlier incantations, for example the Second Merseburg Incantation. All this took place within the framework of the flexible mission strategy. The pagan-Christian text variations of this incantation existed not only in oral form among the people all over Europe, but were also included in medieval codices and therefore can be collected even today. The present article discusses the pagan-Christian, Hungarian text variations of the Second Merseburg Incantation in their widest context of German culture. György Orosz 473

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