|
About 200 A.D. Minucius Felix , a Roman lawyer, wrote a dialogue
in which he reported a discussion between a Christian, Octavius, and a
pagan. The pagan echoed the horrible rumors which were
circulating about the Christians. The passage which follows gives
some indication of what they were. Octavius goes on to show the
pagan calmly and persuasively who Christians really are.
I hear that, persuaded by some absurd conviction,
they adore the head of an ass, the basest of creatures ... The story about
the initiation of new recruits is as detestable as it is well known.
An infant, covered with flour, in order to deceive the unwary is placed
before the one who is to be initiated into the mysteries. Deceived
by this floury mass, which makes him believe that his blows are
harmless, the neophyte kills the infant ... They avidly lick up the blood of
this infant and argue over how to share out its limbs. By this
victim they are pledged together, and it is because of their complicity in
this crime that they keep mutual silence.
Everyone knows about their banquets, these are talked of everywhere,...On festivals they
assemble for a feast with all their children, their sisters, their mothers,
people of both sexes and every age. After eating their fill, when the
excitement of the feast is at its height and their drunken ardor has
inflamed
incestuous passions, they provoke a dog which has been tied to a lamp stand
to leap, throwing it a piece of meat beyond the length of the cord which
holds it. The light which could have betrayed them having thus been
extinguished, they then embrace one another, quite at random.
If this does not happen in fact, it does so in their minds, since that is
the desire. Minucius Felix, Octavius 9,6
|