Is the Apostolic Tradition a document of Roman origin?

The so-called Apostolic Tradition is usually considered an element of the history of the liturgy of the Roman Church. This conviction lays ultimately on two presuppositions: on the attribution of the Apostolic Tradition to St. Hippolytus of Rome and on the presence of two postbaptismal anointings in...

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Main Author: Maciej Zachara
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Polskie Towarzystwo Teologiczne 2012-03-01
Series:Ruch Biblijny i Liturgiczny
Subjects:
Online Access:https://rbl.ptt.net.pl/index.php/RBL/article/view/79
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spelling doaj-833eef3080e44d5fb8d97c46bc49404d2020-11-24T23:20:09ZdeuPolskie Towarzystwo TeologiczneRuch Biblijny i Liturgiczny0209-08722391-84972012-03-0165110.21906/rbl.7979Is the Apostolic Tradition a document of Roman origin?Maciej Zachara0LublinThe so-called Apostolic Tradition is usually considered an element of the history of the liturgy of the Roman Church. This conviction lays ultimately on two presuppositions: on the attribution of the Apostolic Tradition to St. Hippolytus of Rome and on the presence of two postbaptismal anointings in the baptismal ritual of Apostolic Tradition, which is peculiar exclusively to the Roman liturgy. However, none of these presuppositions is certain. The arguments for St. Hippolytus’ authorship are so weak, that this attribution must be considered highly improbable. The presence of two postbaptismal anointings in the Apostolic Tradition can be explained by the complexity of its baptismal ritual which seems to be a conflation of different traditions. On the other hand, the Roman tradition of two postbaptismal anointings is probably due to the episcopal prerogative to administer the confirmation and to the concession given to presbyters to anoint the neophytes with the chrism at the baptisms administered by them. This presbyteral chrismation was afterwards extended to every baptism. Consequently, the origins of the Apostolic Tradition are far from certain and its Roman provenance is by no means proved.https://rbl.ptt.net.pl/index.php/RBL/article/view/79Tradycja apostolska, św. Hipolit, ryt rzymski, bierzmowanie, namaszczenie pochrzcielne
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maciej Zachara
spellingShingle Maciej Zachara
Is the Apostolic Tradition a document of Roman origin?
Ruch Biblijny i Liturgiczny
Tradycja apostolska, św. Hipolit, ryt rzymski, bierzmowanie, namaszczenie pochrzcielne
author_facet Maciej Zachara
author_sort Maciej Zachara
title Is the Apostolic Tradition a document of Roman origin?
title_short Is the Apostolic Tradition a document of Roman origin?
title_full Is the Apostolic Tradition a document of Roman origin?
title_fullStr Is the Apostolic Tradition a document of Roman origin?
title_full_unstemmed Is the Apostolic Tradition a document of Roman origin?
title_sort is the apostolic tradition a document of roman origin?
publisher Polskie Towarzystwo Teologiczne
series Ruch Biblijny i Liturgiczny
issn 0209-0872
2391-8497
publishDate 2012-03-01
description The so-called Apostolic Tradition is usually considered an element of the history of the liturgy of the Roman Church. This conviction lays ultimately on two presuppositions: on the attribution of the Apostolic Tradition to St. Hippolytus of Rome and on the presence of two postbaptismal anointings in the baptismal ritual of Apostolic Tradition, which is peculiar exclusively to the Roman liturgy. However, none of these presuppositions is certain. The arguments for St. Hippolytus’ authorship are so weak, that this attribution must be considered highly improbable. The presence of two postbaptismal anointings in the Apostolic Tradition can be explained by the complexity of its baptismal ritual which seems to be a conflation of different traditions. On the other hand, the Roman tradition of two postbaptismal anointings is probably due to the episcopal prerogative to administer the confirmation and to the concession given to presbyters to anoint the neophytes with the chrism at the baptisms administered by them. This presbyteral chrismation was afterwards extended to every baptism. Consequently, the origins of the Apostolic Tradition are far from certain and its Roman provenance is by no means proved.
topic Tradycja apostolska, św. Hipolit, ryt rzymski, bierzmowanie, namaszczenie pochrzcielne
url https://rbl.ptt.net.pl/index.php/RBL/article/view/79
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