anything laid up or suspended; hence anything laid up in a temple or set apart as sacred. In this sense the form of the word is anath(ee)ma, once in plural used in the Greek New Testament, in Lk 21:5, where it is rendered "gifts." In the LXX. the form anathema is generally used as the rendering of the Hebrew word herem, derived from a verb which means (1) to consecrate or devote; and (2) to exterminate. Any object so devoted to the Lord could not be redeemed (Num 18:14; Lev 27:28, 29); and hence the idea of exterminating connected with the word. The Hebrew verb (haram) is frequently used of the extermination of idolatrous nations. It had a wide range of application. The anathema_ or _herem was a person or thing irrevocably devoted to God (Lev 27:21, 28); and "none devoted shall be ransomed. He shall surely be put to death" (27:29). The word therefore carried the idea of devoted to destruction (Num 21:2, 3; Josh 6:17); and hence generally it meant a thing accursed. In Deut 7:26 an idol is called a herem = anathema, a thing accursed.
In the New Testament this word always implies execration. In some cases an individual denounces an anathema on himself unless certain conditions are fulfilled (Acts 23:12, 14, 21). "To call Jesus accursed" [anathema] (1Cor 12:3) is to pronounce him execrated or accursed. If any one preached another gospel, the apostle says, "let him be accursed" (Gal 1:8, 9); i.e., let his conduct in so doing be accounted accursed.
In Rom 9:3, the expression "accursed" (anathema) from Christ, i.e., excluded from fellowship or alliance with Christ, has occasioned much difficulty. The apostle here does not speak of his wish as a possible thing. It is simply a vehement expression of feeling, showing how strong was his desire for the salvation of his people.
The anathema in 1Cor 16:22 denotes simply that they who love not the Lord are rightly objects of loathing and execration to all holy beings; they are guilty of a crime that merits the severest condemnation; they are exposed to the just sentence of "everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord."
what mentions this? (please help by turning references to this page into wiki links)
(Gr. anathema -- literally, placed on high, suspended, set aside).
A term formerly indicating offerings made to the divinity which
were suspended from the roof or walls of temples for the purpose of
being exposed to view. Thus anathema according to its
etymology signifies a thing offered to God. The word
anathema is sometimes used in this sense in the Old and
New Testaments: In Judith, xvi, 23, it is said that Judith, having
taken all the arms of Holofernes which the people had given him and
the curtain of his bed which she herself had brought, offered them
to the Lord as an anathema of oblivion. In II Mach., ix, 16,
Antiochus promises to adorn with precious gifts (anathemata) the
temple he has pillaged; and in Luke, xxi, 5, mention is made of the
temple built of precious stones and adorned with rich gifts
(anathemata). As odious objects were also exposed to view, e.g. the
head of a criminal or of an enemy, or his arms or spoils, the word
anathema came to signify a thing hated, or execrable,
devoted to public abhorrence or destruction. "To understand the
word anathema", says Vigouroux, "we should first go back to the
real meaning of herem of which it is the equivalent.
Herem comes from the word haram, to cut off, to
separate, to curse, and indicates that which is cursed and
condemned to be cut off or exterminated, whether a person or a
thing, and in consequence, that which man is forbidden to make use
of." This is the sense of anathema in the following passage from
Deut., vii, 26: "Neither shalt thou bring anything of the idol into
thy house, lest thou become an anathema like it. Thou shalt detest
it as dung, and shalt utterly abhor it as uncleanness and filth,
because it is an anathema." Nations, individuals, animals, and
inanimate objects may become anathema, i.e. cursed and devoted to
destruction. It was thus that the people inhabiting the Promised
Land were anathematized as Moses says (Deut., vii, 1, 2): "When . .
. the Lord thy God shall have
delivered them to thee, thou shalt utterly destroy them." When a
people was anathematized by the Lord, they were to be entirely
exterminated. Saul was rejected by God for having spared Agag,
King of the Amalecites, amid the greater part of the booty (I K.
xv, 9-23). Anyone who spared anything belonging to a man who had
been declared anathema, became himself anathema. There is the story
of Achan who had charge of the spoils of Jericho: "The anathema is
in the midst of thee, O Israel: thou canst
not stand before thy enemies till he be destroyed out of thee that
is defiled with this wickedness." Achan, with his family amid
herds, was stoned to death. Sometimes it is cities that are
anathematized. When the anathema is rigorous all the inhabitants
are to be exterminated, the city burned, and permission denied ever
to rebuild it, and its riches offered to Jehovah. This was the fate
of Jericho (Jos., vi, 17). If it is less strict, all the
inhabitants are to be put to death, but the herds may be divided
among the victors (Jos., viii, 27). The obligation of killing all
inhabitants occasionally admits of exceptions in the case of young
girls who remain captives in the hands of the conquerors (Num.,
xxxi, 18). The severity of the anathema in the Old Testament is
explained by the necessity there was of preserving the Jewish
people and protecting them against the idolatry professed by the
neighbouring pagans.
In the New Testament anathema no longer entails death, but the loss
of goods or exclusion from the society of the faithful. St. Paul
frequently uses this word in the latter sense. In the Epistle to
the Romans (ix, 3) he says: "For I wished myself to be an anathema
from Christ, for my brethren, who are my kinsmen according to the
flesh", i.e. "I should wish to be separated and rejected of Christ,
if by that means I would procure the salvation of my brethren." And
again, using the word in the same sense, he says (Gal. i, 9): "If
any one preach to you a gospel besides that which you have
received, let him be anathema." But he who is separated from God is united to the devil, which explains why
St. Paul, instead of anathematizing, sometimes delivers a person
over to Satan (I Tim., i, 20; I
Cor., v, 5). Anathema signifies also to be overwhelmed with
maledictions, as in I Cor., xvi, 22: "If any man love not our Lord Jesus
Christ, let him be anathema." At an early date the Church
adopted the word anathema to signify the exclusion of a
sinner from the society of the faithful; but the anathema was
pronounced chiefly against heretics. All the councils, from the
Council of Nicæa to that of the Vatican, have worded their dogmatic
canons: "If any one says . . . let him be anathema". Nevertheless,
although during the first centuries the anathema did not seem to
differ from the sentence of excommunication,
beginning with the sixth century a distinction was made between the
two. A Council of Tours desires that after three warnings there be
recited in chorus Psalm cviii against the usurper of the goods of
the Church, that he may fall into the curse of Judas, and "that
he may be not only excommunicated,
but anathematized, and that he may be stricken by the sword of
Heaven". This distinction was introduced into the canons of the
Church, as is proved by the letter of John VIII
(872-82) found in the Decree of Gratian (c. III, q. V, c. XII):
"Know that Engeltrude is not only under the ban of excommunication,
which separates her from the society of the brethren, but under the
anathema, which separates from the body of Christ, which is the
Church." This distinction is found in the earliest Decretals, in
the chapter Cum non ab homine. In the same chapter, the
tenth of Decretals II, tit. i, Celestine III (1191-98), speaking of
the measures it is necessary to take in proceeding against a cleric
guilty of theft, homocide, perjury, or other crimes, says: "If,
after having been deposed from office, he is incorrigible, he
should first be excommunicated;
but if he perseveres in his contumacy he should be stricken with
the sword of anathema; but if plunging to the depths of the abyss,
he reaches the point where he despises these penalties, he should
be given over to the secular arm." At a late period, Gregory IX
(1227-41), bk. V, tit. xxxix, ch. lix, Si quem,
distinguishes minor excommunication,
or that implying exclusion only from the sacraments, from major excommunication,
implying exclusion from the society of the faithful. He declares
that it is major excommunication
which is meant in all texts in which mention is made of excommunication.
Since that time there has been no difference between major excommunication
and anathema, except the greater or less degree of ceremony in
pronouncing the sentence of excommunication.
Anathema remains a major excommunication
which is to be promulgated with
great solemnity. A formula for this ceremony was drawn up by Pope
Zachary (741-52) in the chapter Debent duodecim
sacerdotes, Cause xi, quest. iii. The Roman Pontifical
reproduces it in the chapter Ordo excommunicandi et
absolvendi, distinguishing three sorts of excommunication:
minor excommunication,
formerly incurred by a person holding communication with anyone
under the ban of excommunication;
major excommunication,
pronounced by the Pope in reading a sentence; and anathema, or the
penalty incurred by crimes of the gravest order, and solemnly promulgated by the
Pope. In passing this sentence, the pontiff is vested in amice,
stole, and a violet cope, wearing his mitre, and assisted by twelve
priests clad in their surplices and holding
lighted candles. He takes his seat in front of the altar or in some
other suitable place, amid pronounces the formula of anathema which
ends with these words: "Wherefore in the name of God the All-powerful,
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, of the Blessed Peter, Prince of the
Apostles, and of all the saints, in virtue of the power which has
been given us of binding and loosing in Heaven and on earth, we
deprive N-- himself and all his accomplices and all his abettors of
the Communion of the
Body and Blood of Our Lord, we separate him from the society of
all Christians, we
exclude him from the bosom of our Holy Mother the Church in Heaven
and on earth, we declare him excommunicated
and anathematized and we judge him condemned to eternal fire with Satan and his angels and all the
reprobate, so long as he will not burst the fetters of the demon,
do penance and satisfy the Church; we deliver him to Satan to mortify his
body, that his soul may be saved on the day of judgment." Whereupon
all the assistants respond: "Fiat, fiat, fiat." The pontiff and the
twelve priests then cast to the ground the lighted candles they
have been carrying, and notice is sent in writing to the priests
and neighbouring bishops of the name of the one who has been excommunicated
and the cause of his excommunication,
in order that they may have no communication with him. Although he
is delivered to Satan and his angels, he can still, and
is even bound to repent. The Pontifical gives the form for
absolving him and reconciling him with the Church. The promulgation of
the anathema with such solemnity is well calculated to strike
terror to the criminal and bring him to a state of repentance,
especially if the Church adds to it the ceremony of the
Maranatha.
At the end of the first Epistle to the Corinthians, xvi, 22, St.
Paul says, "If any man love not our Lord Jesus
Christ, let him be anathema, maranatha," which means, "The Lord
is come." But commentators have regarded this expression as a
formula of excommunication
very severe among the Jews. This opinion, however, is not sustained
by Vigouroux, "Dict. de la Bible" (s.v. Anathème). In the
Western Church, Maranatha has become a very solemn formula as
anathema, by which the criminal is excommunicated,
abandoned to the judgment of God, and rejected from the
bosom of the Church until the coming of the Lord. An example of
such an anathema is found in these words of Pope Silverius
(536-38): "If anyone henceforth deceives a bishop in such a manner,
let him be anathema maranatha before God and his holy angels." Benedict
XIV (1740-58--De Synodo dioecesana X, i) cites the anathema
maranatha formulated by the Fathers of the Fourth Council of Toledo
against those who were guilty of the crime of high treason: "He who
dares to despise our decision, let him be stricken with anathema
maranatha, i.e. may he be damned at the coming of the Lord, may he
have his place with Judas Iscariot,
he and his companions. Amen." There is frequent mention of this
anathema maranatha in the Bulls of erection for abbeys and other
establishments. Still the anathema maranatha is a censure from
which the criminal may be absolved; although he is delivered to Satan and his angels, the Church, in
virtue of the Power of the Keys, can receive him once more into the
communion of the faithful. More than that, it is with this purpose
in view that she takes such rigorous measures against him, in order
that by the mortification of his body his soul may be saved on the
last day. The Church, animated by the spirit of God,
does not wish the death of the sinner, but rather that he be
converted and live. This explains why the most severe and
terrifying formulas of excommunication,
containing all the rigours of the Maranatha have, as a rule,
clauses like this: Unless he becomes repentant, or gives
satisfaction, or is corrected.
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