Apocalypse. Camille Flammarion
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Название: Apocalypse

Автор: Camille Flammarion

Издательство: Parkstone International Publishing

Жанр: Религия: прочее

Серия: Mega Square

isbn: 978-1-78160-585-1

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ on parchment

      Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Paris

      As it were, these addresses epitomised the history of the doctrine of the end of the world as held by the Christian Church throughout the centuries.

      This history is interesting, for it is also the history of the human mind face to face with its own destiny, and we believe it of sufficient importance to devote ample attention to it.

      Page from the Psalter of Blanche of Castile

      c. 1230

      Illuminated manuscript, 28 × 22 cm

      Bibliothèque de l’Arsenal, Paris

      The existence of a profound and tenacious faith is as old as the centuries, and it is a notable fact that all religions, irrespective of Christian dogma, have opened the same door from this mortal life upon the unknown which lies beyond, it is the door in the Divine Comedy by Dante, although the conceptions of paradise, hell, and purgatory peculiar to the Christian Church, are not universal.

      John on Patmos Woken by the Angel

      Illustration from “The Douce Apocalypse”, c. 1270

      Illumination

      University of Oxford, Bodleian Library, Oxford

      Zoroaster and the Zend-Avesta taught that the world would perish by fire. The same idea is found in the Epistle of St Peter. It seems that the traditions of Noah and of Deucalion, according to which the first great disaster to humanity came by flood, indicated that the second great disaster would be of an exactly opposite character.

      The Angel Proclaims “Who is worthy?” – John Consoled by the Ancient

      Illustration from “The Douce Apocalypse”, c. 1270

      Illumination

      University of Oxford, Bodleian Library, Oxford

      Among the Romans, Lucretius, Cicero, Virgil, and Ovid all also announce the future destruction of Earth by fire.

      According to Jesus, the generation which he addressed would not die before the previously mentioned disaster occurred.

      The Second Seal – The Red Horse

      Illustration from “The Douce Apocalypse”, c. 1270

      Illumination

      University of Oxford, Bodleian Library, Oxford

      St Paul, the real founder of Christianity, believed deeply in the resurrection and the coming end of the world, making it a fundamental dogma of the new church. He referenced it eight or nine times in his first epistle to the Corinthians.

      Unfortunately for the prophecy, Jesus’ disciples, whom he had assured would not die before his accession, died one after the other under the common law.

      The Third Seal – The Black Horse

      Illustration from “The Douce Apocalypse”, c. 1270

      Illumination

      University of Oxford, Bodleian Library, Oxford

      St Paul, who did not know Jesus personally, but was a staunch supporter of the fledgling Christian church, was believed to have lived until the Great Commission (Jesus’ appearance to his eleven disciples on Galilee). Naturally, however, they all died, and thus the end of the world, as predicted by the definitive coming of the Messiah, did not happen.

      The Third Trumpet – A Burning Star Falls from the Heavens

      Illustration from “The Douce Apocalypse”, c. 1270

      Illumination

      University of Oxford, Bodleian Library, Oxford

      Belief in the end of the world did not simply disappear, however. Believers decided to stop taking the prediction literally, seeking instead new interpretations. However, belief in the Gospel suffered as a result. We devoutly buried the dead, laid out in coffins with reverence rather than being burned by fire, and it was written on their tombs that they would rest there until the resurrection.

      The Angel of the Sixth Seal and The Four Angels at the Four Corners of the Earth

      Cimabue

      Fresco

      Basilica di San Francesco d’Assisi, Assisi

      Jesus would “soon” return to judge “the living and the dead”. The Christian word of recognition was Maran atha, “the Lord will come”.

      The apostles Peter and Paul most likely died in the year 64 CE, during the horrible slaughter ordered by Nero after the burning of Rome, set on fire at his command and whose destruction he attributed to the Christians so that he might have a pretext for new persecutions.

      The Locusts Riding

      Illustration from “The Douce Apocalypse”, c. 1270

      Illumination

      University of Oxford, Bodleian Library, Oxford

      St John wrote his Apocalypse (The Book of Revelation) in the year 69 CE. The reign of Nero was a bloody one, and martyrdom seemed to be the natural consequence of a virtuous life. Prodigies appeared on every hand; there were comets, falling stars, eclipses, showers of blood, monsters, earthquakes, famines, pestilences, and above all, there was the Jewish war and the destruction of Jerusalem.

      The War in Heaven

      Illustration from “The Douce Apocalypse”, c. 1270

      Illumination

      University of Oxford, Bodleian Library, Oxford

      Never, perhaps, were so many horrors, so much cruelty and madness, so many catastrophes, crowded into so short a period as in the years 64–69 CE. The little church of Christ was apparently dispersed. It was impossible to remain in Jerusalem.

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