3. Sacrifice

Source 1

Sacrifice

A sacrifice is a ritual that consumes some kind of material. The material to be sacrificed (offered as a present, killed, eaten, burned, or just destroyed) could represent the person offering the sacrifice or the receiver of the sacrifice, or it can represent the institution or social structure desired to be maintained by the ritual. Often, the text accompanying the ritual refers to all these levels, and in this way, the sacrificial material becomes the focal point for the course of the world and - life.

In the last verse of the Purusha hymn (see section 2)  is a phrase that seems completely absurd but is interesting for our understanding of sacrifice as a phenomenon: “With the offering, the gods sacrificed to the sacrifice.” Only a highly specialized priesthood would come up with something like that. But in a way, the statement shows the strange circular logic characteristic of the sacrifice. Purusha is it all: the designation of the world, and the sacrifice from which the world is created. One could say that the one quarter of him which is in this world is sacrificed to the three quarters of him that are hidden in the world of the gods. The visible quarter is constantly kept going with surplus energy from the invisible three quarters. A sacrifice keeps the world going and renews the order established with the creation. "These were the first rules,” the text says, thus seeing the sacrifice as the creator of the social order - in primordial times and at any later sacrifice.

We can learn more about this by comparing sacrifices and thoughts on sacrifice elsewhere in the world. In Christian churches, the Holy Communion or the Eucharist is a sacrifice. Sometimes, it is also called 'communion', because the participants go to the altar, and in front of the altar there is a semicircle with cushions where they can kneel and receive the sacrificial material. Often, an ancient hymn "O thou Lamb of God" is sung. Three times, it implores Christ as the sacrificial Lamb, who took upon him the sins of the world. Each participant receives a wafer, an ultra-thin slice of bread and a small cup of wine. Before eating and drinking, the Christian minister reads aloud a short text in memory of the Last Supper that Jesus, according to the Christian myths, shared with his disciples shortly before he was arrested and executed. On that occasion, tradition says, he broke a loaf of bread into pieces, shared it with the disciples and said, "Take this and eat it: it is my body, which is given for you. "In the same way, he poured wine, saying, "Drink all thereof, this cup is the new covenant with my blood, which is shed for you that your sins will be forgiven." When the bread and wine are handed out, the minister speaks to each participant: "This is the body of Jesus Christ" and "This is the blood of Jesus Christ."

The text is a rewrite of an English draft version of an introduction to Horisont - a textbook for the Danish upper-secondary school RE, edited by Associate Professors Annika Hvithamar and Tim Jensen, and Upper-Secondary School teachers Allan Ahle and Lene Niebuhr, published by Gyldendal, Copenhagen 2013. The original introduction was written by Annika Hvithamar and Tim Jensen based on contributions from J. Podemann Sørensen.

Source 2

The altarpiece from Tribsees

The altarpiece from Tribsees: Top center shows God in his sky between the sun and moon, worshipped by angles. To the left we see Adam and Eve in the jaws of Hell, a symbol of man at the mercy of sin. To the right an angel predicts that Mary is to give birth to Christ, who will save humanity from this situation. In the center, the four evangelists pour the word, i.e. the words of the gospel, which they themselves have co-authored, into a grinder driven by the four rivers of paradise. On both sides, the twelve apostles can be seen, as they watch over the floodgates. Out of the grinder comes altar bread, which can be seen at the bottom center in the shape of the baby Jesus sitting in the chalice in the exact same way as they placed the bread in the wine at that time. To the left, altar bread is handed to the four estates: the nobility, the clergy, commoners and peasants. To the right the emperor is crowned, and he, too, gets one of the round pieces of bread. The sacrificial material, the small round piece of bread, has become the focal point of not only creation, sin, and salvation, but also of an entire social structure and the authority of a ruler, as we have seen it in the Indian and Egyptian sacrifices.

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