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Although most early Christian sources indicate that the kiss is on the lips, the Apocryphal Acts modify it to be a kiss of the feet or hands. In contrast to previous texts that allowed women and men to exchange the kiss with each other, The Apostolic Tradition is the first source specifically to prohibit this practice.
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Read More »The earliest Christian references to kissing appear in the Pauline epistles. Commandments for Christians to exchange a kiss occur at the end of Thessalonians, 1 Corinthians, 2 Corinthians, and Romans and they are virtually identical in their wording: “Greet one another” (or 1 Thessalonians, “all the brethren”) “with a holy kiss.” Although these one-line sentences do not contain much data from which to reconstruct a ritual, they form the basis for several scholarly theories concerning the kiss's origin.
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Read More »Unfortunately, the kiss's role in this text is far from clear. Although presented in Apuleius's discussion of the Isis rites, the kiss does not occur during the initiation ritual itself but several days later and in the context of expressing gratitude; most likely it is a kiss of thanksgiving, a well-attested Greco-Roman gesture. The phrase “the priest and now my father” is also vague: does the narrator interpret his kiss primarily as a familial kiss (Mithras is now his father), a religious kiss (Mithras is a priest), or a combination of these? And, of course, there remains the often raised question of how closely Apuleius's descriptions represent actual practices. Nevertheless, Apuleius's narrative implies a connection between kissing and a religious group's use of familial imagery. I am not proposing that the rites of Isis directly influenced early Christian worship. Rather, this passage's use of kissing to illustrate kinship with a religious officiant suggests that the kiss's link to concepts of family may have motivated its application as a religious ritual in groups such as the Isis cult or early Christianity. Regardless of whether the kiss's use among the earliest Christians was due to its pneumatological significance, its familial connotations, or some other unknown origin, once Paul wrote about it and his writings became increasingly authoritative, the church had a clear mandate for the kiss's role in Christian ritual. Additionally, early Christians became aware of how neighboring churches exchanged the kiss and they often imitated (or in some cases challenged) the way it was performed. As a result, in contrast to the scarcity of sources regarding the kiss's beginnings, there exists a wealth of information on its later practice and interpretation. The last first-century reference to the ritual kiss comes from 1 Peter 5:14—“Greet one another with a kiss of love.” The difference between Paul's “holy kiss” and 1 Peter's “kiss of love” shows that, even in the first century, not all Christians used the same term for describing the ritual kiss. Like the Pauline epistles, 1 Peter gives no explanation of its command to kiss each other; the author assumes that his audience has previous knowledge of the ritual kiss. These five first-century references to the kiss show that as early as circa 50 C.E. kissing formed part of several Christian communities' ritual practice. Yet after 1 Peter, there is a fifty-year hiatus during which no Christian sources allude to the kiss. Most likely this is due to the dearth of early second-century sources that speak of Christian rituals. The first break from this silence comes from chapter sixty-five of Justin's First Apology, where Justin describes a church service that occurred after a baptismal ritual. In Justin's description, the kiss followed the common prayer and preceded the Eucharist. Unlike later authors, Justin stresses the kiss's connection only with prayer despite its temporal proximity to the Eucharist. Within a few decades of Justin's Apology, two other patristic authors write about the kiss. Athenagoras refers to the kiss's careful exchange as an example of Christian self-control. Clement of Alexandria warns that bold salutations among Christians are like spiders biting the lips; to avoid this “poison of licentiousness” Christians must exchange the kiss with “a chaste and closed mouth.” Both authors see the kiss as a salutation, implying a connection with the New Testament commands to greet each other with a kiss. Clement's analogy of a spider injecting poison by touching the mouth and his warning against “unchaste” kisses become the first of many indications in early Christian sources that the ritual kiss was a kiss on the lips. Combined with Athenagoras's suggestion that an overly enthusiastic kiss could corrupt the bodies of those called brothers and sisters and Clement's reference to “the shameless use of a kiss,” the passages attest to late second-century men and women kissing each other. The final second-century source referring to the ritual kiss is The Acts of Paul and Thecla. According to The Acts, after the Iconians imprison Paul, Thecla bribes the guards in order to visit Paul and kiss the fetters that bind him. Although no extant non-Christian sources refer to the kissing of a prisoner's chains, The Acts of Paul and Thecla gives no explanation for Thecla's actions. This lack of a gloss may suggest that the author expected the Christian reader already to be familiar with this motif. Although The Acts of Paul and Thecla is a fictitious account, its assumptions about audience indicate that, by the late second century, the kissing of martyrs' bodies already may have become an established Christian ritual. If this is the case, The Acts of Paul and Thecla presents the only second-century attestation to ritual kissing outside of the regular worship service. It would also provide the earliest example of a type of kiss that will become extremely prevalent in fourth- and fifth-century accounts, a cultic kiss associated with martyrdom, sainthood, pilgrimage, and relics. By the mid-third century, writings from Rome, Athens, Alexandria, Carthage, North Africa, Asia Minor, and Syria all speak of ritual kissing among Christians. Tertullian, Origen, and The Apostolic Tradition still connect the kiss with the end of prayer, although Origen is also the first writer directly to link the ritual kiss with the Eucharist. Cyprian and The Apostolic Tradition witness the kiss as part of the baptism ceremony. The Apostolic Tradition gives the first example of the kiss's use in ordination. These sources also show the kiss's expanding role outside of the formal worship service. Perpetua has several examples of non-liturgical kisses, including the kiss as a seal of martyrdom; Tertullian refers to kissing martyrs' bodies as well as the kiss's use in domestic devotions. Cyprian may allude to the confessor's kiss as a rite of reconciliation. Perpetua, Tertullian, and the Apocryphal Acts refer to the kiss as a non-liturgical greeting among Christians.
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Read More »As detailed in Chapter 3 of my Kissing Christians, these works also show important variations in how community members exchange the kiss and the emerging ecclesiastical hierarchy's attempts to regulate ritual kissing. Tertullian and The Apostolic Tradition limit the kiss to baptized Christians; Tertullian claims that “Gnostics” do not follow this distinction. Tertullian also notes varying beliefs among congregation members regarding the kiss and fasting. Although most early Christian sources indicate that the kiss is on the lips, the Apocryphal Acts modify it to be a kiss of the feet or hands. In contrast to previous texts that allowed women and men to exchange the kiss with each other, The Apostolic Tradition is the first source specifically to prohibit this practice. By the end of the fourth century, many of these emerging trends—the move of the kiss from seal of prayer to preparation for Eucharist, the kiss's use in an increasing number of liturgical and non-liturgical settings, further restrictions on who kisses whom—become standard practice. The fourth-century sources speak of the ritual kiss in a variety of different contexts: as part of prayer, Eucharist, baptism, ordination, penitence, martyrdom, and epistolary salutations. These sources also hint at geographic variations in the kiss's position in the Eucharist liturgy and whether the bishop kisses the initiate immediately after baptism. Additionally, they show increasing restrictions on how Christians exchange the kiss. Similar to The Apostolic Tradition, The Apostolic Constitutions limits the kiss to those of the same gender. Like the Apocryphal Acts, the ascetic Pseudo-Clement's Second Letter on Virginity no longer has opposite-sexed Christians exchange a labial kiss. Fourth-century documents also affirm a split between laity and clergy: The Apostolic Constitutions specifies that clergy only kiss other clergy and laity other laity. The Testament of Our Lord also supports this division. The fifth-century sources continue to display an increased diversity in early Christian kissing practices. They indicate shifts in the kiss's position within the Eucharist service, differences between eastern and western liturgical practices, and a proliferation of the kiss's connection to other rituals. By the end of the fifth century, the kiss appears as part of the closing of prayers, the Eucharist, baptism, ordination, martyrdom, the cult of martyrs, greetings, monastic vows, home devotions, saluting the altar, epistolary conventions, and death rituals. This growing variety of kissing references also shows that as Christian practices diversify and change the kiss moves into newly developed ritual arenas. In recent years, many subfields of early Christian studies have become increasingly committed to studying the ancient church within the context of the larger Greco-Roman world. Modern scholars often list numerous parallels between Christian writings and contemporary pagan and Jewish sources. Surprisingly, most previous work on early Christian kissing has been unaffected by this larger trend in scholarship. The resulting isolation of what Christians did from what their non-Christian neighbors did clearly hinders an effective exploration of early Christian kissing. This neglect of non-Christian practices, however, is not a problem unique to kissing scholarship. Rather, it is characteristic of many scholarly investigations of early Christian ritual. This artificial divide between Christian ritual and non-Christian gesture may partially be due to the very process of ritualization. In their construction of a given ritual, communities often attempt to mitigate the similarities between the ritual and the non-ritual and define rituals as ontologically distinct from everyday actions. Scholars' frequent neglect of a ritual's larger cultural context may be one indication of ritualization's ultimate success. In terms of the ritual kiss, the development of kissing in the early church constantly interacted with the kiss's use as a widespread cultural gesture. Nevertheless, most early Christian texts try to minimize these connections, as does much of modern scholarship. To emphasize the interplay between the Christian ritual kiss and everyday kissing practices blurs the very distinctions that early Christian constructions of the ritual kiss tried so hard to preserve, distinctions between ritual and non-ritual, Christian and non-Christian.
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