| Risus Paschalis
Introduction
Definition
Background
Book
Review
Sermon
2000 Report
2001 Report
Sermons OnLine
McCoy Sermon
Holy Humor Books |
From the Catholic Encyclopedia:
Risus Paschalis
This strange custom originated in Bavaria in
the fifteenth century. The priest inserted in his sermon funny stories
which would cause his hearers to laugh (Ostermärlein), e.g. a description
of how the devil tries to keep the doors of hell locked against the
descending Christ. Then the speaker would draw the moral from the story.
This Easter laughter, giving rise to grave abuses of the word of God, was
prohibited by Clement X (1670_1676) and in the eighteenth century by
Maximilian III and the bishops of Bavaria (Wagner, De Risu Paschali,
Königsberg, 1705; Linsemeier, Predigt in Deutschland, Munich, 1886).
FREDERICK G. HOLWECK
Transcribed by John Wagner and
Michael T. Barrett
From the Catholic Encyclopedia,
copyright © 1913 by the Encyclopedia Press, Inc. Electronic version
copyright © 1997 by New Advent, Inc.
|
|