The Encyclopedia of Religion
12:544-557
Mircea Eliade, ed.
SACRIFICE. The term sacrifice, from the Latin sacrifcium
(sacer, "holy"; facere, "to make"), carries the connotation
of the religious act in the highest, or fullest sense; it can also be understood
as the act of sanctifying or consecrating an object. Offering is used as
a synonym (or as a more inclusive category of which sacrifice is a subdivision)
and means the presentation of a gift. (The word offering is from the Latin
offerre,
"to offer, present"; the verb yields the noun oblatio.) The Romance languages
contain words derived from both the Latin words. The German Opfer
is generally taken as derived from offerre, but some derive it from the
Latin operari ("to perform, accomplish"), thus evoking once again
the idea of sacred action.
Distinctions between sacrifice and offering are variously
drawn, as for example, that of Jan van Baal: "I call an offering every
act of presenting something to a supernatural being, a sacrifice an offering
accompanied by the ritual killing of the object of the offering" (van Baal,
1976, p. 161). The latter definition is too narrow, however, since "killing"
can be applied only to living beings, human or animal, and thus does not
cover the whole range of objects used in sacrifice as attested by the history
of religions. A truly essential element, on the other hand, is that the
recipient of the gift be a supernatural being (that is, one endowed with
supernatural power), with whom the giver seeks to enter into or remain
in communion. Destruction, which can apply even to inanimate objects, is
also regarded as essential by [12
Encyclopedia of Religion 545] some authors but not by all;
thus, according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, a sacrifice is "a cultic
act in which objects were set apart or consecrated and offered to a god
or some other supernatural power" (1977, vol. 16, p. 128b). On the other
hand, it is indeed essential to the concept that the human offerer remove
something from his own disposal and transfer it to a supernatural recipient.
The difference between the broad concept of offering and the narrower concept
of sacrifice may be said to reside in the fact that a rite, a more or less
solemn external form, is part of sacrifice.
Sacrifice differs from other cultic actions. The
external elements of prayer are simply words and gestures (bodily attitudes),
not external objects comparable to the gifts of sacrifice. Eliminatory
rites, though they may include the slaying of a living being or the destruction
of an inanimate object, are not directed to a personal recipient and thus
should not be described as sacrifices. [See Scapegoat.] The same is true
of ritual slayings in which there is no supernatural being as recipient,
as in slayings by which companions are provided for the dead (joint burials)
or that are part of the dramatic representation of an event in primordial
time.
According to some theories, the conception of sacrifice
as gift-giving is the result of a secondary development or even of a misunderstanding
of rites that originally had a different meaning. (On this point, see "Theories
of the Origin of Sacrifice," below.)
Morphology (Typology) of Sacrifice
The various forms of sacrifice show some common elements
that respond to the following questions: (1) Who offers the sacrifice?
(2) What is offered? (3) What external forms belong to the act of offering?
(4) In what places and at what times are sacrifices offered? (5) Who is
the recipient of the sacrifice? (6) For what reasons are sacrifices offered?
The classifications implied by these questions often overlap (e.g., the
type of material used for the sacrifice may determine the rite).
The Sacrificer. Most religions allow
not only sacrifices offered by a group or community but also individual
sacrifices for entirely personal reasons; in unstratified societies, therefore,
everyone is in principle able to offer sacrifices. In fact, however, such
purely personal sacrifices are rare, and as soon as sacrifices become connected
with a group, however small, not every member of the group but only a representative
may offer them. The sacrificer may be the head of a family or clan, an
elder, or the leader of a band of hunters; in matrilinear societies, the
sacrificer may be a woman. This is true especially of hunting and food-gathering
cultures as well as nomadic pastoral cultures; even when these include
individuals with specific ritual functions (medicine men, sorcerers, soothsayers,
shamans), the function of offering sacrifice is not reserved to them. (In
pastoral cultures we can sometimes see that only at a secondary stage do
shamans replace family heads for certain sacrifices.) Food-planting cultures,
on the other hand, commonly have cultic functionaries to whom the offering
of sacrifice is reserved (e.g., the "earth-chiefs" in West African cultures).
In sacrifices occasioned by some public endeavor or concern (e.g., an epidemic,
or before or after a military campaign) the head of the tribe or larger
group is the natural offerer of sacrifice. In archaic high cultures the
function often goes with the kingly office; frequently, however, it decreases
in importance in the course of further development and is then discernible
only in vestigial form.
The more fully articulated the divisions in a society,
the more often there is a class of cultic ministers to whom the offering
of sacrifice is reserved. In this situation, tensions and changing relations
of power can arise between king and priests, as in ancient Egypt. When
a special priestly class exists, membership is either hereditary or must
be earned through a consecration that is often preceded by lengthy training,
or both may be required: descent from a certain family, class, or caste
and training that leads to consecration. The consecrated functionary who
is an offerer of sacrifice often must then submit to further special preparation
(through purificatory rites, etc.) before exercising his office. A priest
may have other cultic or magical functions in addition to that of offering
sacrifice; he may, for example, act as oracle, exorcist, healer, or rainmaker,
he may be a source of tradition and knowledge, and he may have noncultic
functions as well.
Myths sometimes speak of the gods themselves as offering
sacrifice. Sacrifice by human beings is then simply an imitation of the
primal sacrifice that played a role in the establishment of the cosmic
order.
Material of the Oblation. Scholars often generalize,
as for example: "If we look about in the history of religion, we find there
are very few things that have not, at some time or in some place, served
as offering" (van Baaren, 1964, p. 7). Others will say that everything
which has a value for human beings can be the material of sacrifice; the
value may be symbolic and not necessarily inherent (as seen, for example,
in the firstlings sacrifices of food-gatherers). Perhaps we may say that
originally what was sacrificed was either something living or an element
or symbol of life; in other words, it was not primarily food that was surrendered,
but life itself. Yet inanimate things were also included in the material
for sacrifice. (But do not archaic cultures regard a great deal as living
that to the modern scientific mind is inanimate? Some scholars emphasize
not the life but the [12
Encyclopedia of Religion 546] power of the object.) Only
by including inanimate objects is it possible to establish a certain classification
of sacrificial objects, as for example, on the one hand, plants and inanimate
objects (bloodless offerings), and, on the other, human beings and animals
(blood offerings). But such a division is not exhaustive, since a comprehensive
concept of sacrifice must include, for example, a bloodless consecration
of human beings and animals.
Bloodless offerings. Bloodless
offerings include, in the first place, vegetative materials. Thus food-gatherers
offer a (symbolic) portion of the foodstuffs they have collected. Cultivators
offer to higher beings (whom they may regard as in need of nourishment)
sacrifices of food and drink: fruits, tubers, grains, and the foods that
are made from these plants (meal, baked goods, oil), along with drinks,
especially beer and other alcoholic beverages, that are poured out as libations.
Among herders milk and milk products (e.g., koumiss, a drink derived from
milk and slightly fermented, used in Inner Asia) play a similar role, especially
in firstlings sacrifices (see below). In the ritual pouring (and especially
in other ritual uses) of water, the intention is often not sacrifice but
either some other type of rite (lustration, purification, or expiation)
or sympathetic magic (e.g., pouring water in order to bring on rain). The
offering of flowers or of a sweet fragrance otherwise produced (as in the
widespread use of incense, or, among the American Indians, of tobacco smoke)
also serves to please the gods or other higher beings.
Inanimate objects used in sacrifice include clothing,
jewelry, weapons, precious stones and precious metals, sacrificial vessels
made of metal, and, in more advanced civilizations, coins (especially as
substitutes). Also used in sacrifice are all sorts of objects that are
offered as votive gifts and are kept in a sanctuary, though it is possible
that sympathetic magic also plays a role here, as for instance when one
seeks deliverance from illnesses by depositing likenesses of the diseased
organs.
Blood offerings. When animals or human
beings serve as the sacrificial gift, the shedding of blood may become
an essential part of the sacrificial action. Thus ritual slaying makes
its appearance among cultivators and herders. (The practice is generally
not found in hunting cultures, where a small but symbolically important
part of the animal slain during the hunt is offered; thus the slaying is
not part of the sacrificial action but precedes it. The slaying by the
Ainu of a bear raised for the purpose is perhaps not really a sacrifice
but a "dismissal" rite.)
The most extensive development of ritual slaying
is found among cultivators. Here blood plays a significant role as a power-laden
substance that brings fertility; it is sprinkled on the fields in order
to promote crop yield. [See Blood.] Head-hunting, cannibalism, and human
sacrifice belong to the same complex of ideas and rites; human sacrifice
is also seen as a means of maintaining the cosmic order. [See Cannibalism
and Human Sacrifice.] The combination of blood rites with magical conceptions
of fertility is found more among tuber cultivators than among grain cultivators
(but it is also found among maize growers, as in Mesoamerica). The assumption
that all blood sacrifices originated among food cultivators and then were
adopted at a later stage by nomadic herders is one-sided; ritual slaying
probably made its appearance independently among the latter.
Blood sacrifices consist primarily of domesticated
animals: among cultivators, sheep, goats, cattle, pigs, fowl; among nomads,
also reindeer, horses, and camels (whereas pigs are regarded as unclean
animals and not used, while fowl would not usually be kept). Dogs too may
serve as sacrificial animals; they are especially sacrificed to provide
companions for the dead. The offering of fish, birds other than domesticated
fowl or doves, and wild animals is rarer. The characteristics of the sacrificial
animal are often determined by the recipient; thus brightly colored animals
are offered to the divinities of the sky, black animals to the divinities
of the underworld and the dead or to feared demonic beings.
Sacrificial animals are not always killed by the
shedding of their blood; they are sometimes throttled (especially in Inner
Asia) or drowned in water or a bog. Furthermore, there is also the bloodless
consecration of an animal, in which the animal is not killed but transferred
alive into the possession of the divinity or other higher being, after
which it often lives out its life in a sacred enclosure. Such animals can
best be described as offerings, not as victims.
Substitutes. Blood sacrifices,
especially those in which human beings were offered, were often replaced
at a later stage by other sacrificial gifts, as, for example, "part-for-the-whole"
sacrifices, like the offering of fingers, hair, or blood drawn through
self-inflicted wounds. Some authors would thus classify so-called chastity
sacrifices and include under this heading very disparate and sometimes
even opposed practices such as, on the one hand, sexual abandon (sacral
prostitution) and, on the other, sexual renunciation, castration, and circumcision.
Animal sacrifices can replace human sacrifices, as
seen in well-known examples from Greek myth, epic, and history and in the
Hebrew scriptures (Old Testament; Gn. 22:1-19). This shift may also be
due to the suppression of an older religion (e.g., of the Bon religion
of Tibet by Buddhism) or to measures taken by a colo- [12
Encyclopedia of Religion 547] nial regime (e.g., the British
rule in India) against human sacrifice. Substitute gifts for human beings
or animals may also be of a vegetative kind (e.g., sacrificial cakes) or
may consist of payments of money. Another form of substitution is that
by representations, such as the clay figure substitutes for human beings
that were buried with a high-ranking dead person and sent into the next
world with him. Such figurines accompanying the dead are known from ancient
Egypt and China; however, it is not certain that the practice was preceded
by actual human sacrifices in these countries or that these practices are
best described as sacrifices. Other kinds of pictorial representations
have also been used, including objects cut from paper. Many votive offerings
should probably be listed under this heading.
That human sacrifices were replaced by other kinds
of sacrifices is certain in many instances, as in the late stage of Punic
religion, when under Roman rule human sacrifices were replaced by other
gifts (for example, lambs), as is attested by votive inscriptions; in other
instances it is simply a hypothesis that certain rites replaced human sacrifice.
Thus the so-called hair sacrifice is often a rite of initiation, sacralization,
or desacralization (a rite of passage) in which the hair is not really
a sacrificial gift and need not have replaced any human sacrifice. Sacral
prostitution may also be understood as a magical rite of fertility or as
a symbolic act of union with a divinity, rather than as a substitute for
human sacrifice.
Divine offerings. In the examples given
under the previous heading, a sacrificial gift is replaced by another of
lesser value. The opposite occurs when the sacrificial gift itself is regarded
as divine. This divine status may result from the idea that the sacrificial
action repeats a mythical primordial sacrifice in which a god sacrificed
either himself or some other god to yet a third god. In other cases the
sacrificial object becomes divinized in the sacrificial action itself or
in the preparation of the gifts. Thus among the Aztec the prisoner of war
who was sacrificed was identified with the recipient of the sacrifice,
the god Tezcatlipoca; moreover images of dough, kneaded with the blood
of the sacrificed human, were identified with the sun god Huitzilopochtli
and ritually eaten. In the Vedic religion divinity was assigned to the
intoxicating drink soma, and in Iranian religion to the corresponding drink
haoma or to the plant from which it was derived. For Christians who regard
the celebration of the Eucharist as a rendering present of Christ's death
on the cross, Christ himself is both offerer and sacrificial gift.
Rite (Manner and Method) of Sacrifice.
Sacrifice involves not only a visible gift but an action or gesture that
expresses the offering. This may consist of a simple deposition or a lifting
up of the gift, without any change being effected in the object. The external
form of the offering is already determined in many cases by the material
of sacrifice; in the case of fluids, for example, the natural manner of
offering them is to pour them out (libation), which is a kind of destruction.
If the gift is a living being (animal or human), the destruction takes
the form of killing. It is doubtful, however, whether destruction can be
regarded as an essential element of any and every sacrificial rite. It
is true that in many sacrifices the offering is in the form of slaughter
or ritual killing; in others, however, the slaughter is only a necessary
presupposition or technical requirement for the act of offering as such.
Thus, among the Israelites, Levitical law prescribed that the slaughtering
not be done by the priest; the latter's role began only after the slaughtering
and included the pouring of sacrificial blood on the altar.
When food as such is in principle the real object
offered, slaughter is a necessary first step if the animal sacrificed is
to be in a form in which it can be eaten. When it is thought that the divinity
(or, more generally, the recipient) does not eat material food but simply
receives the soul or life of the sacrificial animal, burning may be used
as a way of letting the soul rise up in the form of smoke ("the odor of
sacrifice"; see also, on the burning of incense, below). When blood in
particular is regarded as the vehicle of life, the pouring out of the blood,
or the lifting up of bleeding parts of the victim, or even the flow of
blood in the slaughtering may be the real act of offering. Another category
of blood rites serves to apply the power in the blood to the offerers,
their relatives, and the sphere in which they live their life (dwelling,
property); this application may take the form of, for example, smearing.
The conception that the offerers have of the recipient
and of his or her location also helps determine the form of the rite. If
the recipient is thought to dwell in heaven, then the smoke that rises
from a burning object becomes an especially appropriate symbol. The offerers
will prefer the open air and will choose high places, whether natural (mountains,
hills) or artificial (roofs, temple towers), or else they will hang the
sacrificial gift on a tree or stake. Sacrifices to chthonic or underworld
beings are buried, or the blood is allowed to flow into a hole. For water
divinities or spirits the sacrifice is lowered into springs, wells, streams,
or other bodies of water (although the interpretation of prehistoric burials
in bogs as "immersion sacrifices" is not undisputed), or the offerers fill
miniature boats with sacrificial gifts. Sacrifices offered to the dead
are placed on the graves of the latter, or the blood of the victims is
poured onto these graves.
[12 Encyclopedia
of Religion 548]
Finally, the intention of the offerers or the function
of the sacrifice also influences the form of the rite. If the sacrifice
establishes or renews a covenant or, more generally, if it promotes the
communion or community of recipient and offerer, then a sacrificial meal
is usually an indispensable part of the rite. This meal can be understood
as sharing a meal with the god or, the recipient, or more rarely, as ingesting
the god; in this second case, the communion has a mystical character. In
the first case, acceptance by the recipient removes the sacrificial gift
from the profane sphere and sanctifies it; the recipient now becomes a
host and celebrates a banquet with the offerer, who thereby receives back
the sacrificial gift (or at least a part of it) as a vehicle now laden
with higher powers. Thus understood, the sacrificial meal can be called
a sacrament. The meal also establishes or strengthens the communion of
the offerers with one another when it is a group that makes the offering.
More rarely, people have believed that they eat the god himself in the
flesh of the sacrificial animal (as in some Greek mysteries) or in images
of dough (which were sometimes mixed with the blood of sacrificed human
beings, as among the Aztec). (For the Christian conception of the Eucharist
as a sacrificial meal, see below.)
Other rituals also express communion. For example,
part of the sacrificial blood is poured on the altar, while the participants
are sprinkled with the rest (as in the making of the covenant at Sinai,
according to Ex. 24: 38). Or a person walks between the pieces of a sacrificial
animal that has been cut in half.
In other cases the victim is completely destroyed,
as in a burnt offering, or holocaust, which may express homage or complete
submission to the divinity on which the offerers consider themselves dependent.
Total destruction often also characterizes an expiatory sacrifice, in which
a sacrificial meal is antecedently excluded by the fact that the sacrificial
animal becomes the vehicle of sin or other uncleanness and must therefore
be eliminated or destroyed (e.g., by being burned outside the camp).
The ritual of sacrifice can take very complicated
forms, especially when professionals (priests) do the offering; part of
their training is then the acquisition of a precise knowledge of the ritual.
The sacrificial action is in stages: the sacrificial animal is often chosen
some time in advance, marked, and set aside; before the sacrificial act
proper, it is ritually purified and adorned; next comes the slaughter of
the animal, then the offering proper or consecration or transfer from the
profane to the sacred sphere or condition. At times, signs are heeded that
are thought to show acceptance of the gift by the recipient. The division
of the sacrificed animal can take various forms: an uncontrolled tearing
apart of the victim by the participants, in imitation of a dismemberment
reported in myth, or a careful dissection, as when the condition of specific
organs yields omens (divination). In some sacrifices the bones may not
be broken. A special form of division is cutting in two, which is practiced
not only in sacrifices proper but also in rites of purification and expiation.
(See Henninger, 1981, pp. 275-285.) A sacrificial meal may conclude the
sacrifice, but there may also be special concluding rites for releasing
the participants from the realm of the sacred. It is sometimes also prescribed
that nothing is to be left of the sacrificial gift and nothing carried
away from the sphere of the sacred; any remnants must be buried or burned
(though this last action is not the same as a burnt offering).
Place and Time of Sacrifice. The place of
offering is not always an altar set aside for the purpose. Thus sacrifices
to the dead are often offered at their graves, and sacrifices to the spirits
of nature are made beside trees or bushes, in caves, at springs, and so
on. Artificial altars in the form of tables are relatively rare; they become
the normal site of sacrifice only in the higher civilizations, where they
are usually located in a temple or its forecourt and are sometimes specially
outfitted, as for example with channels to carry away the sacrificial blood.
Far more frequently, natural stones or heaps of stones or earthen mounds
serve as altars. A perpendicular stone is often regarded as the seat of
a divinity, and sacrifice is then offered in front of the stone, not on
it. Flat roofs and thresholds can also be preferred locations for sacrifice.
With regard to time, a distinction must be made between
regular and extraordinary (occasional or special) sacrifices. The time
for regular sacrifices is determined by the astronomical or vegetative
year; thus there will be daily, weekly, and monthly sacrifices (especially
in higher cultures in which service in the temple is organized like service
at a royal court). Sowing and harvest and the transition from one season
to the next are widely recognized occasions for sacrifice; in nomadic cultures
this is true especially of spring, the season of birth among animals and
of abundance of milk. The harvest season is often marked by first-fruits
sacrifices that are conceived as a necessary condition for the desacralization
of the new harvest, which may only then be put to profane use. The date
of the New Year feast is often established not astronomically but in terms
of the vegetative year. [See New Year Festivals.] In the life of the individual,
birth, puberty, marriage, and death are frequently occasions for sacrifices.
The annual commemoration of a historical event may also become a set part
of the calendar and thus an occasion for sacrifice. [See Seasonal Ceremonies.]
Extraordinary occasions for sacrifice are provided
by [12 Encyclopedia
of Religion 549] special occurrences in the life of
the community or the individual. These occurrences may be joyous, as, for
example, the erection of a building (especially a temple), the accession
of a new ruler, the successful termination of a military campaign or other
undertaking, or any event that is interpreted as a manifestation of divine
favor. Even more frequently, however, it is critical situations that occasion
extraordinary sacrifices: illnesses (especially epidemics or livestock
diseases) and droughts or other natural disasters. Many expiatory sacrifices
also have their place in this context, whether offered for individuals
or the community (see below).
Van Baal (1976, pp. 168-178) distinguishes between
low-intensity and high-intensity rites; the former occur in normal situations,
the latter in disasters and misfortunes, which are taken as signs that
relations with higher beings have been disturbed. This division is to a
great extent the same as that between regular and extraordinary sacrifices,
but it pays insufficient heed to the fact that joyous occasions may also
lead to extraordinary sacrifices.
Recipient of Sacrifice. Many definitions
of sacrifice specify divine beings (in either a monotheistic or a polytheistic
context) as the recipients of sacrifice, but this is too narrow a view.
All the many kinds of beings to whom humans pay religious veneration, or
even those whom they fear, can be recipients of sacrifice. Such recipients
can thus be spirits, demonic beings, and even humans, although sacrifice
in the proper sense is offered to humans only when they have died and are
considered to possess a superhuman power. The dead to whom sacrifice is
offered include especially the ancestors to whom is attributed (as in Africa
and Oceania) a decisive influence on human beings. Care for the dead (e.g.,
by gifts of food and drink) need not always indicate a cult of the dead;
a cult exists only when the dead are regarded not as helpless and in need
(as they were in ancient Mesopotamia), but rather as possessing superhuman
power.
Intentions of Sacrifice. Theologians
usually distinguish four intentions of sacrifice. praise (acknowledgment,
homage), thanksgiving, supplication, and expiation; but several or even
all four of these intentions may be combined in a single sacrifice. From
the standpoint of the history of religions this schema must be expanded
somewhat, especially with regard to the third and fourth categories.
Praise (homage). Pure sacrifices of
praise that express nothing but homage and veneration and involve no other
intention are rarely found. They occur chiefly where a regular sacrificial
cult is practiced that resembles in large measure the ceremonial of a royal
court.
Thanksgiving. Sacrifices of thanksgiving
are more frequent. According to the best explanation of firstlings sacrifices,
these, in the diverse forms they have taken in various cultures, belong
to this category. (For divergent interpretations, see "Theories of the
Origin of Sacrifice," below.) Votive sacrifices likewise belong here, insofar
as the fulfillment of the vow is an act of thanksgiving for the favor granted.
Supplication. Yet more commonly found
are sacrifices of supplication. The object of the petition can range from
purely material goods to the highest spiritual blessings (forgiveness of
sins, divine grace). The line of demarcation between these sacrifices and
sacrifices of expiation and propitiation is often blurred.
Sacrifices of supplication include all those sacrifices
that, in addition to establishing or consolidating the link with the world
of the sacred (which is a function of every sacrifice), are intended to
have some special effect. Such effects include the maintenance of the cosmic
order; the strengthening of the powers on which this order depends (e.g.,
by the gift of blood, as in the human sacrifices of the Aztec); and the
sacralization or consecration of places, objects, and buildings (construction
sacrifices, dedication of boundary stones, idols, temples), of individual
human beings, and of human communities and their relationships (ratification
of treaties). Construction activities are often thought to be an intrusion
into the sphere of superhuman beings (spirits of earth and water, or divinities
of earth and water) who may resent them; for this reason, scholars speak
in this context of sacrifices intended to appease or placate. These come
close to being expiatory sacrifices (in the broadest sense of the term),
insofar as the offerers intend to forestall the anger of these higher beings
by a preventive, apotropaic action (protective sacrifices).
Sacrifices are also offered for highly specialized
purposes, for example, in order to foretell the future by examining the
entrails of the sacrificial animal.
Expiation. In the narrow sense, expiatory
sacrifices presuppose consciousness of a moral fault that can be punished
by a higher being who must therefore be placated by suitable acts on the
part of the human beings involved. [See Atonement.] But the concept of
expiation (purification, lustration) is often used in a broader sense to
mean the removal or prevention of every kind of evil and misfortune. Many
authors assume that the ethical concept of sin was a late development and
therefore consider rites of purification and elimination for the removal
~f all evils (in which no relation to higher personal beings plays a part)
to be the earliest form of expiation. Furthermore, when there is a human
relationship to personal beings, a distinction must be made. These beings
(spirits, demons, etc.) may be regarded as indifferent to ethical considerations,
unpredictable, and capricious, or even malicious, envious, cruel, and bloodthirsty.
In this case expiation means simply the removal [12
Encyclopedia of Religion 550] of what has roused (or might
rouse) the anger of these beings, so that they will leave humans in peace;
no relationship of goodwill or friendship is created or sought. On the
other hand, the higher beings may be regarded as inherently benevolent,
so that any disturbance of a good relationship with them is attributed
to a human fault; the normal good relationship must therefore be restored
by an expiatory sacrifice or other human action; in these cases we speak
of atonement, conciliation, or propitiation. The human fault in question
may be moral, but it may also be purely ritual, unintentional, or even
unconscious.
Certain facts, however, render questionable the overly
schematic idea of a unilinear development from a nonethical to an ethical
conception that is connected with general theories on the evolution of
religion. Even very "primitive" peoples have ideas of higher beings that
approve and keep watch over moral behavior. Furthermore, not only in the
high cultures but in primitive religions as well, expiatory sacrifice is
often accompanied by a confession of sins. A more highly developed form
of the ideas underlying expiatory sacrifice may be linked to the concept
of representation or substitution, especially when the role of substitute
is freely accepted (self-sacrifice). This, however, is not the proper context
for speculative theories (developed especially by James G. Frazer and those
inspired by him) on the ritual slaying of the king, who may be replaced
by a substitute; Frazer is speaking of the magical influence of the king
in his prime on the general welfare of the community, and not of disturbances
of the communal order by faults for which amends must be made.
Theories of the Origin of Sacrifice
Very different answers have been given to the question
of which of the various forms of sacrifice presented above is to be regarded
as the oldest and the one out of which the others emerged either by development
to a higher level or by degeneration. In each case, theories of sacrifice
have been heavily influenced by their authors' conceptions of the origin
and development of religion. Scholars today generally approach all these
explanations with some skepticism. A brief review of the various theories
is nonetheless appropriate, since each emphasizes certain aspects of the
phenomenon and thus contributes to an understanding of it.
Sacrifice as Gift. Before the history
of religions became an independent discipline, the conception of sacrifice
as gift was already current among theologians; it was therefore natural
that the history of religions should initially make use of this concept.
[See Gift Giving.] In this discipline, however, the conception acquired
two completely different applications: the sacrificial gift as bribe and
the sacrificial gift as act of homage.
The gift as bribe. The gift theory
proposed by E. B. Tylor (1871) supposes that higher forms of religion,
including monotheism, gradually developed out of animism as the earliest
form. Since the spirits resident in nature are indifferent to moral considerations
and have but a limited sphere of power, they can be enriched by gifts and
thereby influenced; in other words, they can be bribed. Sacrifice was therefore
originally a simple business transaction of do ut des ("I give so that
you will give in return"), an activity without moral significance. Sacrifice
as homage and as abnegation or renunciation developed only gradually out
of sacrifice as bribe; but even when it did, the do ut des idea continued
to be operative for a long time in the later stages of religion, especially
wherever sacrifice was conceived as supplying the recipient with food.
Critics of this view have stressed that in archaic
cultures the giving of a gift, even between human beings, is not a purely
external transaction but at the same time establishes a personal relation
between giver and recipient. According to some scholars, the giving of
a gift also involves a transfer of magical power for which, in a very generalized
sense, they often use the term mana. This personal relation is even more
important when a gift is presented to superhuman beings. Thus it is understandable
that sacrificial gifts of little material value can be quite acceptable;
such gifts need not be interpreted as efforts to circumvent the higher
beings and their influence. In light of this consideration, later theories
of sacrifice gave the do ut des formula a deeper meaning and regarded the
commercial understanding of it as a degenerate version.
The gift as homage. Wilhelm Schmidt
(1912-1955, 1922) understood the sacrificial gift in a way completely different
from Tylor. He took as his point of departure the principle that the original
meaning of sacrifice can be seen most clearly in the firstlings sacrifices
of primitive hunters and food-gatherers. These are sacrifices of homage
and thanksgiving to the supreme being to whom everything belongs and who
therefore cannot be enriched by giftsósacrifices to the giver of foods
that human beings do not produce but simply appropriate for themselves
through hunting and gathering. These sacrifices consist in the offering
of a portion of food that is often quantitatively small but symbolically
important. In nomadic herding cultures this sacrifice of homage and thanksgiving
takes the form of an offering of the firstlings of the flocks (young animals)
or of the products of the flocks (e.g., milk). In food-growing cultures
the fertility of the soil is often attributed to the dead, especially the
ancestors; they, therefore, become [12
Encyclopedia of Religion 551] the recipients of the first-fruits
sacrifice. When this happens, however, the character of the sacrifice is
altered, since the recipients now have need of the gifts (as food) and
can therefore be influenced. According to Anton Vorbichler (1956), what
is offered in firstlings sacrifices is not food but life itself, but since
life is seen as deriving from the supreme being as creator, the basic attitude
of homage and thanksgiving remains unchanged.
Schmidt's historical reconstruction, according to
which firstlings sacrifices are the earliest form of sacrifice, has not
been sufficiently demonstrated. From the phenomenological standpoint, however,
this kind of sacrifice, in which the gift has symbolic rather than real
value and is inspired by a consciousness of dependence and thanksgiving,
does exist and must therefore be taken into account in any general definition
of sacrifice.
Sacrifice as a (Totemic) Communal Meal.
W. Robertson Smith (1889) developed a theory of sacrifice for the Semitic
world that he regarded as universally applicable. He saw the weakness of
Tylor's theory, which paid insufficient heed to the sacral element and
to the function of establishing or maintaining a community. Under the influence
of J. F. McLennan, who had done pioneer work in the study of totemism,
Smith proposed a theory of sacrifice whereby the earliest form of religion
(among the Semites and elsewhere) was belief in a theriomorphic tribal
divinity with which the tribe had a blood relationship. Under ordinary
circumstances, this totem animal was not to be killed, but there were rituals
in which it was slain and eaten in order to renew the community. In this
rite, recipient, offerer, and victim were all of the same nature; sacrifice
was thus originally a meal in which the offerers entered into communion
with the totem. As a vivid example of such a ceremony, Smith cites a story
told by Nilus of a camel sacrifice offered by the bedouin of the Sinai.
It was the transition to a sedentary way of life and the social changes
effected by this transition that gave rise to the conception of sacrifice
as a gift comparable to the tribute paid to a sovereign, the latter relationship
being taken as model for the relation to the divinity. The burnt offering,
or holocaust, was likewise a late development.
Smith's theory is valuable for its criticism of the
grossly mechanistic theory of Tylor and for its emphasis on the communion
(community) aspect of sacrifice; as a whole, however, it is unacceptable
for a number of reasons. First, the idea of sacrifice as gift is already
present in the firstlings sacrifices offered in the egalitarian societies
of primitive hunters and food-gatherers; it does not, therefore, presuppose
the model of the offering of tribute to a sovereign. Second, it is doubtful
that totemism existed among the Semites; furthermore, totemism does not
occur universally as a stage in the history of human development, as was
initially supposed in the nineteenth century when the phenomenon was first
discovered, but is rather a specialized development. Third, the intichiuma
ceremonies (increase ceremonies) of central Australian tribes are magical
rites aimed at multiplying the totem animal species. They were used by
early theorists of totemism, but they do not in fact match the original
model of sacrifice postulated by Smith. Finally, the supposed account by
Nilus is not a reliable report from a hermit living in the Sinai Peninsula
but a fiction whose author is unknown; it shares with the late Greek novel
certain cliches used in depicting barbarians and cannot be regarded as
a reliable historical source (see Henninger, 1955). Smith's theory of sacrifice
also contributed to Freud's conception of the slaying of the primal father,
which Freud saw as the origin of sacrifice and other institutions, especially
the incest taboo; this conception is therefore subject to the same criticisms.
As Link between the Profane and Sacral Worlds.
Henri Hubert and Marcel Mauss (1899) rejected Tylor's theory because of
its mechanistic character. They also rejected Smith's theory because it
arbitrarily chose totemism as a universally applicable point of departure
and reconstructed the development of the forms of sacrifice solely by analogy
and without adequate historical basis and, further, because offering is
an essential element in the concept of sacrifice. Hubert and Mauss themselves
begin with an analysis of the Vedic and Hebraic rituals of sacrifice and,
in light of this, define sacrifice as "a religious act which, by the consecration
of a victim, modifies the condition of the moral person who accomplishes
it, or that of certain objects with which he is concerned" (Encyclopaedia
Britannica, 1977, vol. 16, p. 129a). The victim is not holy by nature (as
it is in Smith's theory); the consecration is effected by destruction,
and the connection with the sacral world is completed by a sacred meal.
Implied here is the view (which goes back to Emile Durkheim) of the French
sociological school that the sacral world is simply a projection of society.
"Gods are representations of communities, they are societies thought of
ideally and imaginatively.... Sacrifice is an act of abnegation by which
the individual recognizes society; it recalls to particular consciences
the presence of collective forces, represented by their gods" (Evans-Pritchard,1965,
p.70).
The objection was raised against this explanation
that conclusions universally valid for the understanding of sacrifice as
such, especially in "primitive" societies, cannot be drawn from an analysis
of two highly developed forms of sacrifice, even if the two differ among
themselves. Thus E. E. Evans-Pritchard, having called the work of Hubert
and Mauss "a masterly analysis of [12
Encyclopedia
of Religion 552] Vedic and Hebrew sacrifice," immediately
adds: "But masterly though it was, its conclusions are an unconvincing
piece of sociologistic metaphysics.... They are conclusions not deriving
from, but posited on a brilliant analysis of the mechanism of sacrifice,
or perhaps one should say of its logical structure, or even of its grammar"
(Evans-Pritchard, 1965, pp. 70-71).
Sacrifice as Magic. Hubert and Mauss considered
the recipient of sacrifice to be simply a hypostatization of society itself.
Other authors have gone even further, regarding the idea of a recipient
as not essential to the concept of sacrifice. They more or less explicitly
presuppose that the idea of an impersonal force or power, to which the
name mana is given more frequently than any other, is older than the idea
of soul or spirit as understood in animism. For this reason, the idea of
sacrifice as a purely objective magical action (the triggering of a magical
force that is thought to be concentrated especially in the blood), accomplished
by destruction of a sacrificial gift (e.g., the slaying of an animal),
must be the basic form, or at least one of the basic forms, of sacrifice.
Sacrifices of this kind are said to be "predeistic." Expressions such as
this, which imply a temporal succession, are also used by phenomenologists,
who claim in principle to be simply describing phenomena and not asserting
any kind of development. In this view the concept of sacrifice as gift
is a secondary development in which gifts to the dead played an important
role (Loisy, 1920). According to Gerardus van der Leeuw (1920-1921), sacrifice
conceived as gift constitutes a transfer of magical force; the do ut des
formula describes not a commercial transaction but the release of a current
of force (do ut possis dare, "I give power to you so that you can give
it back to me"). The recipient is strengthened by the gift; the two participants,
deity and human beings, are simultaneously givers and receivers, but the
central role belongs to the gift itself and to the current of force that
it sets in motion. This theory, then, combines to some extent the gift
theory and the communion theory, but it does so from the standpoint of
magic.
There do in fact exist rituals of slaying and destruction
in which no personal recipient is involved and that are regarded as operating
automatically; there is no evidence, however, that such rituals are older
than sacrifice in the sense described earlier. The examples constantly
adduced come to a very great extent from high cultures (e.g., Roman religion).
An especially typical form occurs in Brahmanic speculation, where sacrifice
is looked upon as a force that ensures the continuation of a cosmic process
to which even the gods are subject. Other examples come from food-growing
peoples. When human beings contribute by their own activity to the production
of food, their consciousness of dependence on higher powers is less than
in an economy based on the appropriation of goods not produced by humans.
Thus it is easier to adopt the idea that the higher powers can be influenced
and even coerced by sacrifices and other rites. For this reason, the firstlings
sacrifices of hunters and food-gatherers do not fit in with speculations
that give priority to magic, nor do such speculations take account of such
sacrifices, and thus the full extent of the phenomenon of sacrifice is
lost from view. Sacrifice and magic should rather be considered as phenomena
that differ in nature; they have indeed influenced each other in many ways,
but neither can be derived from the other. The personal relation that is
established by a gift is fully intelligible without bringing in an element
of magic (see van Baal, 1976, pp. 163ó 164, 167, 177-178). [See Magic.]
Sacrifice as Reenactment of Primordial Events.
According
to Adolph E. Jensen (1951), sacrifice cannot be understood as gift; its
original meaning is rather to be derived from certain myths found in the
cultures of cultivators, especially in Indonesia and Oceania. These myths
maintain that in primordial time there were as yet no mortal human beings
but only divine or semidivine beings (dema beings); this state ended with
the killing of a dema divinity from whose body came the plants useful to
humans. The ritual slaying of humans and animals, headhunting, cannibalism,
and other blood rites are ceremonial repetitions of that killing in primordial
time; they affirm and guarantee the present world order, with its continuous
destruction and re-creation, which would otherwise be unable to function.
Once the myth had been largely forgotten or was no longer seen to be connected
with ritual, rites involving slaying were reinterpreted as a giving of
a gift to divinities (who originally played no role in these rites, because
the primordial divine being had been slain); blood sacrifices thus became
"meaningless survivals" of the "meaningful rituals of killing" of the earlier
foodgrowing cultures. Magical actions are likewise degenerate fragments
of the originally meaningful whole formed by the mythically based rituals
of killing.
This theory has some points in common with Freud's
theory of the murder of the primal father and with the theory according
to which sacrifice originated in the self-sacrifice of a divine being in
the primordial time of myth. The common weakness of all these theories,
is that they take account only of blood sacrifices. These, however, developed
only in food-growing and even later cultures, whereas in the firstlings
sacrifices of hunters and food-gatherers there is no ritual killing, and
bloodless offerings are widespread in many other cultures as well.
[12 Encyclopedia
of Religion 553]
Sacrifice as Anxiety Reaction. In the
theories discussed thus far, except for the theory of sacrifice as a gift
in homage, firstlings sacrifices receive either inadequate attention or
none at all. Vittorio Lanternari (1976), on the other hand, provides a
formal discussion of these, but gives an interpretation of them that is
completely different from that of Schmidt. Lanternari's point of departure
is the analysis of a certain form of neurosis provided by some psychologists;
according to this analysis, this kind of neurosis finds expression in the
undoing of successes earlier achieved and is at the basis of certain religious
delusions. Lanternari maintains that a similar psychic crisis occurs among
"primitives" when they are confronted with success (hunters after a successful
hunt, food cultivators after the harvest) and that this crisis leads them
to undertake an at least symbolic destruction of what they had gained.
For Lanternari, then, a firstlings sacrifice is the result of anxiety,
whereas for Schmidt it is an expression of gratitude. Hunters feel the
slaying of the animal to be a sacrilege, which explains the rites of Siberian
peoples that seek a reconciliation with the slain animal and a repudiation
of the killing. For cultivators the sacrilege consists in the violation
of the earth, which is the dwelling of the dead, by the cultivation of
the soil; they feel anxiety at the thought of the dead and worry about
future fertility, even if the harvest is a good one. It is a secondary
matter whether the symbolic destruction of the gain is accomplished by
offering food to a higher being or by simply doing away with a portion
of it.
Critics of the psychopathological explanation have
pointed out the essential differences between the behavior of neurotics
and the religious behavior exhibited in firstlings sacrifices. In the psychically
ill (those who are defeated by success), efforts at liberation are purely
individual; they are not part of a historical tradition, are not organically
integrated into a cultural setting, and do not lead to inner deliverance.
In religious life, on the contrary, efforts to surmount a crisis are organically
inserted into tradition and culture, tend to restore psychic balance, and
in fact achieve such a balance. For this reason the "primitive" peoples
in question are not defeated by life, as neurotics are; on the contrary,
their way of life has stood the test of ages. Whatever judgment one may
pass on the value or nonvalue of the underlying religious views and modes
of behavior of these peoples, one cannot characterize them as pathological;
for this reason a psychopathological explanation of sacrifice must also
be rejected. This is not to deny that fear or anxiety plays a significant
part in certain forms of sacrifice; such feelings result primarily from
the ideas of the offerers about the character of the recipient in question
(see Henninger, 1968, pp. 176-180).
Sacrifice as a Mechanism for Diverting Violence.
Whereas
Jensen derived rituals involving killing, which were subsequently reinterpreted
as "sacrifices," from certain myths of food-growing cultures, Rene Girard
(1977, 1978) has proposed a more comprehensive theory that explains not
only sacrifice but the sacred itself as resulting from a focusing of violent
impulses upon a substitute object, a scapegoat. According to Girard, the
peaceful coexistence of human beings cannot be taken for granted; when
the desires of humans fasten upon the same object, rivalries arise and
with them a tendency toward violence that endangers the existing order
and its norms. This tendency can be neutralized, however, if the reciprocal
aggressions are focused on a marginal object, a scapegoat. The scapegoat
is thereby rendered sacred: it is seen as accursed but also as bringing
salvation. Thus the focusing of violence on an object gives rise to the
sacred and all that results from it (taboos, a new social order). Whereas
the violence was originally focused on a randomly chosen object, in sacrifice
the concentration takes a strict ritual form; as a result, internecine
aggressions are constantly being diverted to the outside and cannot operate
destructively within the community. At bottom, therefore, sacrifice lacks
any moral character. Eventually it was eliminated by the critique of sacrifice
that began in the Hebrew scriptures and, most fully, by the fact that Jesus
freely made himself a "scapegoat" and in so doing transcended the whole
realm of sacrifice. Girard supports his thesis by appealing to the phenomenon
of blood sacrifice, which (especially in the form of human sacrifice) is
a constant in the history of religions, and by citing the evidence of rivalry
and violence, leading even to fratricide, that is supplied by the mythical
traditions (especially myths of the origin of things) and also by history
(persecution of minorities as scapegoats, etc.).
A critique of this theory can in part repeat the
arguments already advanced against Jensen. Apart from the fact that it
does not distinguish between sacrifice and eliminatory rites, Girard's
concept of sacrifice is too narrow, for he supports it by reference solely
to stratified societies and high cultures. It could at most explain blood
sacrifices involving killing, but not sacrifice as such and certainly not
the sacred as such, since the idea of the sacred exists even among peoples
(e.g., in Australia) who do not practice sacrifice. As was pointed out
earlier, firstlings sacrifices (of which Girard does not speak) have intellectual
and emotional presuppositions far removed from Girard's key concepts of
"primal murder" and "scapegoat mechanism."
The value of the theories here reviewed is that each
of them highlights a certain aspect of sacrifice. It is unlikely that we
will ever have a sure answer to the ques- [12
Encyclopedia of Religion 554] tion of whether there was a
single original form of sacrifice or whether, on the contrary, various
forms developed independently.
Sacrifice in History
It will never be possible to write a complete history
of sacrifice. In any case, sacrifice is found in most of the religions
known to us. The extent to which the human mind has taken the phenomenon
of sacrifice for granted is clear, for example, from the role it plays
in many myths dealing with primordial time. Probably to be grouped with
these sacrifices is the sacrifice that Utanapishtim, the hero of the Mesopotamian
flood story, offers after the flood, as well as the one that Noah offers
in the biblical flood story (Gn. 9:20-21). Even earlier, the Bible tells
of the sacrifices offered by Cain the farmer and Abel the shepherd (Gn.
4:3-5); these are expressly said to be firstlings sacrifices. Aristotle,
too, was of the opinion that the sacrifice of firstlings (of field and
flock) is the oldest form of sacrifice. As we know today, these sacrifices
were also performed by peoplesóhunters and food-gatherersówhose economy
was of a purely appropriative kind.
Archaic Cultures. Scholars disagree
on whether there are unambiguous indications of sacrifice in the Paleolithic
period. On the basis of a comparison with the practices of more recent
hunting peoples, various authors have interpreted the burial of the skulls
and long bones of cave bears as part of firstling sacrifices; this view,
however, has met with strong criticism. Nonetheless, Hermann Muller-Karpe
(1966, pp.224-229) insists that there is clear evidence of sacrifice in
the early Paleolithic period. There is undisputed evidence of sacrifice
in the Neolithic period (Muller-Karpe, 1968, pp. 334-348; see also pp.
348-371 on the treatment of the dead).
Sacrifice is also found in all the types of nonliterate
cultures made known to us by ethnologists. It is not detectable, however,
among some primitive hunters and food-gatherers, for example, in Australia;
whether it was present there at an earlier time is uncertain. On the other
hand, it is amply attested among nomadic shepherds in both Asia and Africa,
and among food-growing peoples, from primitive tuber cultivators down to
the most highly developed grain growers, who themselves mark a transition
to the high cultures (as for instance the ancient rice-growing cultures
of Japan and China). It is typical of many food-growing cultures (e.g.,
in Africa) that, while they believe in a supreme creator god, they assign
him hardly any role in cult. Sacrifices are offered primarily or even exclusively
to lesser divinities, spirits of nature, and ancestors who in some instances
are regarded as mediators and intercessors with the supreme creator god.
Historical High Cultures. In Shinto,
the ancient nature religion of Japan, sacrifices were offered to the divinities
of nature and to the dead; these were in part regularly recurring sacrifices
determined by the rhythm of the agricultural year and in part sacrifices
of supplication or sacrifices in fulfillment of vows made under extraordinary
circumstances. While originally offered simply by individuals, sacrifice
eventually became the concern of the community and was therefore offered
by the emperor or by priests commissioned by him. Human sacrifices also
occurred.
In China the sacrifice that the emperor offered to
heaven and earth at the time of the winter solstice had an important function.
In addition to sacrifices determined by the agricultural year, sacrifices
especially to the ancestors played a large part in the life of the people.
These were offered at the graves of the dead, in the clan's hall of the
ancestors, or before the family's ancestral tablets. The emperor sacrificed
to his ancestors in temples erected especially in their honor.
For ancient Egypt, the archaeological, epigraphical,
and literary evidence points to a strictly ritualized sacrificial cult,
administered by a highly organized priesthood and including daily sacrifices
in the temples, where the divinity was treated like a sovereign in his
palace.
The same was true of ancient Mesopotamia, where the
Sumerians already had a professional priesthood and a rather full calendar
of feasts with accompanying obligatory sacrifices. Both priesthood and
calendar were to a very large extent taken over and developed still further
by the invading Semites. The ritual and therefore the sacrificial cult
of the Hittites were strongly influenced by the pre-Indo-European population
of Anatolia (whose language also continued to be largely used in ritual),
but were also influenced by Mesopotamia. Mythological and ritual texts
from Ugarit give evidence of a sacrificial cult that in part was influenced
by Mesopotamia and in part showed peculiarly Canaanite characteristics;
some of the terms connected with sacrifice are related to Hebrew terms.
The evidence for the other Semites is sketchy. In
the high cultures of southern Arabia, which are known to us from inscriptions
dating from as far back as the first millennium BCE, the sacrificial cult
was administered by a professional priesthood and was offered mainly to
the three major astral divinities (Sun, Moon, Venus). Documentation for
northern and central Arabia begins at a later time; apart from rock inscriptions
containing scattered details about religion, the chief sources are literary,
mostly from the Islamic period, and provide rather sparse information about
pilgrimages, to the shrines of local divinities and the sacrifices offered
there.
[12 Encyclopedia
of Religion 555]
In Vedic and later Hindu religion, sacrifice, which
was controlled by the brahmans, was ritualized down to the smallest detail
and given a comprehensive speculative theological explanation. In the horse
sacrifice (the Asvamedha) and in other cultic practices, as, for example,
the sacrifice of butter and of the sacred intoxicating drink soma, there
are elements common to the Indo-Iranian world, but after the immigration
of the Aryans into India, these were to some extent amalgamated there with
pre-Aryan rites. Buddhism, on the other hand, rejected sacrifice in principle;
tendencies to a spiritualization of sacrifice and its replacement by asceticism
are also found in some currents of Hinduism.
Animal sacrifices were also practiced in the oldest
form of Iranian religion, where they were inherited from the Indo-Iranian
period. During his reform, Zarathushtra (Zoroaster) abolished these practices.
In later times such sacrifices again made their appearance to some extent;
they were offered, however, not to Ahura Mazda but to subordinate heavenly
beings. Bloodless sacrifices, involving especially the sacred intoxicating
drink haoma, remained especially important.
Historical Greek religion combined the religion of
the Indo-European invaders with that of the pre-Indo-European population;
the same combination marked the sacrificial cult. There were bloodless
sacrifices of food and drink. In blood sacrifices a distinction was made,
as far as objects and ritual were concerned, between those offered to the
ouranic gods (hiereia, thusiai), which culminated in a sacrificial meal,
and those offered to the chthonic gods (sphagia), in which there
was no sacrificial meal and the victim was often completely cremated or
buried (sacrifices of destruction). Pigs and cattle were sacrificed to
the ouranic gods, while inedible animals (horses, asses, dogs) were the
chief offerings to the chthonic gods. Human sacrifice was later replaced
by other sacrifices. The sacrificer was the ruler in the earliest period;
later on there were professional priests.
In its earliest form, before intensive contact with
Greek religion, Roman religion was pronouncedly agrarian. Occasions for
sacrifices were therefore determined primarily by the agricultural year,
and only later by special occasions in civic life. Etruscan influence shows
in the divination (haruspicia) that was connected with sacrifice;
the animals sacrificed were chiefly pigs, sheep, and cattle (suevetaurilia).
Like
Roman religion generally, the sacrificial cult had a marked juridical character.
The sacrifices known from the Hebrew scriptures (Old
Testament) are, in their external form, largely the same as those found
in the surrounding world, especially among the Canaanites. As far as ritual
was concerned, a distinction was made chiefly between the burnt offering,
or holocaust ('olah), in which the sacrificial animal was completely
burned up, and the sacrifice of salvation or peace (zevah shelamim).
In the latter, only certain parts of the sacrificial animal were burned;
the blood, regarded as the vehicle of life and therefore not to be consumed
by humans, was poured out (in many sacrifices it was smeared on the altar),
and the rite ended with a sacrificial meal. Expiatory sacrifices constituted
a special category comprising ashram, "guilt sacrifice," and hatís, "sacrifice
for sin," the distinction between which is not entirely clear. In these
sacrifices the animal had to be burned up, probably because it had become
the vehicle of impurity. Minhah meant a bloodless sacrifice (of vegetables),
but the term was also used in a broader sense. There were, in addition,
incense sacrifices and libations. The sacrificial cult was ritualized in
great detail, especially in the period after the Babylonian exile. In this
ritual the three major feasts, those involving a prescribed pilgrimage
to the central sanctuary, were marked by extensive sacrifices. In addition,
there were daily sacrifices in the temple. There were also individual occasions
for sacrifice, some of them prescribed, others inspired by freely made
vows. After the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE, the sacrificial
cult ceased and was replaced by other religious activities.
Islam is in principle opposed to sacrifice. "It is
not their flesh and blood [i.e., that of sacrificial animals] that reaches
God but the piety of your heart" (Qur'an, surah 22:38). Sacrifice thus
has no place in official worship. Pre-Islamic blood sacrifices live on,
in external form, in the great slaughters that take place as part of the
pilgrimage ritual at Mount Arafat near Mecca, and similarly in almost all
the countries of the Islamic world, on the tenth day of the month Dhu al-Hijjah.
These are interpreted, however, as commemorations of the sacrifice of Abraham
and as almsgiving, inasmuch as the flesh is given to the poor or to anyone
who wants it. Blood sacrifices (and bloodless ones as well) are also part
of popular piety, especially of veneration of the saints; but these are
not sanctioned by orthodox Islam.
According to New Testament teaching, which is developed
especially in the letter to the Hebrews, the sacrifices of the Old Testament
were only provisional and had to cease under the new covenant. The self-giving
of Jesus in his death on the cross is understood as the definitive and
perfect sacrifice that has the power in itself to effect expiation and
redemption and that therefore makes all earlier sacrifices superfluous.
In the Roman Catholic church and the Eastern churches the celebration of
the Eucharist is regarded as a rendering present (not a repetition) of
the sacrifice of the cross, and therefore itself constitutes a real sacrifice
in which Jesus [12
Encyclopedia of Religion 556] Christ the high priest, using
the ministry of the ordained priests who represent him, offers himself
as the perfect sacrificial gift. The sixteenth-century reformers rejected
the official priesthood and the sacrificial dimension of the Eucharist
(Calvin took the most radical position on this point); the celebration
of the Lord's Supper thus became simply a commemoration of Jesus and, though
a sacrament, had no sacrificial character. In recent times, there has been
a tendency in the Lutheran church to confer to some degree a sacrificial
character on the Lord's Supper. Even more explicit however is the emphasis
placed on the sacrificial character of the Lord's Supper by the Anglican
church. In Protestantism generally the term sacrifice refers to a purely
interior attitude.
Conclusion
In the course of its history, which can be traced
through several millennia, sacrifice has undergone many changes, and this
in all its aspects: changes in the material of sacrifice (occasioned by
economic changes but also by ethical considerations, e.g., in the suppression
of human sacrifice); changes with regard to place and time (centralization
of cult, regulation of feasts and thereby of the occasions for sacrifice);
changes in the offerer (the rise of classes of official sacrificers); and
changes in ritual and motivation. These developments do not, however, reflect
a one-directional "advance." Egoistic and magical motives were not always
eliminated by higher motives; in fact, they often asserted themselves even
more strongly in connection with manifestations of religious degeneration.
In the same context a quantitative increase in sacrifices is also often
to be seen; thus in some late cultures the number of human sacrifices became
especially extensive (e.g., among the Punics and the Aztec).
Disapproval and criticism of sacrifice might spring
from a skeptical, antireligious attitude that condemned sacrifice as meaningless
waste. However, it could also be motivated by a more profound reflection
on the meaning of sacrifice in the light of religious interiority, leading
to an emphasis on inner conviction, the self-giving of the human being
to the divinity, which finds symbolic expression in sacrifice, and without
which the external rite has no religious value. This cast of mind could
lead to the complete abolition of the external rite, but also to a consciously
established accord between external action and interior attitude.
Tendencies to the spiritualization and ethicization
of sacrifice were already present in Indian religion, where they produced
a mysticism of sacrifice; in the philosophers of classical antiquity, who
regarded ethical behavior as of highest value; and above all in the biblical
religions. Early in the Hebrew scriptures the idea was expressed that obedience
to God's commandments is better than sacrifice (1 Sm. 15:22), and the prophetic
criticism of sacrifice was directed at an outward cult unaccompanied by
interior dispositions and ethical behavior. The wisdom literature, too,
repeatedly stresses the superior value of religious dispositions and moral
behavior. This outlook became even more pronounced in postbiblical Judaism,
once the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE had put an end to the
sacrificial cult. From the beginning, Christianity emphasized not only
the continuance of cultic sacrifice in the celebration of the Eucharist
but also the necessity of a self-surrender that finds external expression
in other ways as well; thus, even in the New Testament, prayers, hymns
of praise, good works, and especially love of neighbor are described as
"sacrifices." These tendencies became particularly strong in Protestantism,
which no longer acknowledged the Eucharist to be a sacrifice.
Finally, the idea of renunciation, which is connected
with the offering of a gift, was especially emphasized in Christianity,
so that every kind of asceticism and selfabnegation came to be called sacrifice
(there is a similar development in Buddhism). A one-sided emphasis on this
aspect led finally to a very broad and metaphorical use of the term sacrifice.
Thus an abandonment of possessions and a personal commitment to an idea
or to the attainment of certain goals, especially if this commitment demands
costly effort, is described as sacrifice in the active sense of the term.
We also speak of the victims of wars, epidemics, natural disasters, and
so on with a sense that they are, in a passive sense, sacrificial victims.
Thus the word sacrifice ultimately became very much a secular term in common
usage; yet the origins of sacrifice in the religious sphere remain evident.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Baal, Jan van. "Offering, Sacrifice and Gift." Numen 23 (December 1976):
161-178.
Baaren, Th. P. van. "Theoretical Speculations on Sacrifice." Numen 11
(January 1964): I-12.
Bertholet, Alfred. Der Sinn des kultischen Opfers. Berlin, 1942.
Closs, Alois. "Das Opfer in 0st und West.'' Kairos 3 (1961):153-161.
Evans-Pritchard, E. E. Theories of Primitive Religion. Oxford, 1965.
Faherty, Robert L. "Sacrifice." In Encyclopaedia Britannica. 15th ed.
Chicago, 1974.
Girard, Rene. Violence and the Sacred. Translated by Patrick Gregory.
Baltimore, 1977.
Girard, Rene. Des choses cachees depuis la fondation du monde.
Paris, 1978.
Gray, Louis H., et al. "Expiation and Atonement." In Encyclo- [12
Encyclopedia of Religion 557] pacdia of Religion and Ethnics,
edited by James Hastings, vol. 5. Edinburgh, 1912.
Heiler, Friedrich. Erscheinungsformen und Wesen der Religion. Vol. I
of Die Religionen der Menschheit. Stuttgart, 1961.
Henninger, Joseph. "Ist der sogenannte Nilus-Bericht eine brauchbare
religionsgeschichtliche Quelle?" Anthropos 50 (1955): 81-148.
Henninger, Joseph. "Primitialopfer und Neujahrsfest." In Anthropica.
Studia Instituti Anthropos, vol. 21. Sankt Augustin, West Germany, 1968.
Henninger, Joseph. Les fetes de printemps chez les Semites et la Paque
israelite. Paris, 1975.
Henninger, Joseph. Arabica Sacra: Aufsatze zur Religionsgeschichte Arabiens
und seiner Randgebiete. Fribourg, 1981.
Hubert, Henri, and Marcel Mauss. "Essai sur la nature et la fonction
du sacrifice." L'annee sociologique 2 (1899): 29-138. An English translation
was published in 1964 (Chicago): Sacrifice: Its Nature and Function.
James, E. O. Sacrifice and Sacrament. London, 1962.
James, E. O., et al. "Sacrifice." In Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics,
edited by James Hastings, vol. 11. Edinburgh, 1920.
Jensen, Adolf E. Myth and Cult among Primitive Peoples. Translated by
Marianna Tax Choldin and Wolfgang Weissleder. Chicago, 1963.
Kerr, C. M., et al. "Propitiation." In Encyclopaedia of Religion and
Ethics, edited by James Hastings, vol. 10. Edinburgh, 1918.
Lanternari, Vittorio. 'La Grande Festa': Vita rituale e sistemi di produzione
nelle societa tradizionali. 2d ed. Bari, 1976.
Leeuw, Gerardus van der. "Die do-ut-des-Formel in der Opfertheorie."
Archiv fur Religionswissenschaft 20 (1920-1921): 241-253.
Leeuw, Gerardus van der. Religion in Essence and Manifestation (1938).
2 vols. Translated by J. E. Turner. Gloucester, Mass., 1967.
Loisy, Alfred. Essai historique sur le sacrifice. Paris, 1920.
Muller-Karpe, Hermann. Handbuch der Vorgeschichte. 2 vols. Munich, 1966-1968.
Le sacrifice, I-V. Nos. 2-6 of Systemes de pensee en Afrique noire.
Ivry, France, 1976 - 1983.
Schmidt, Wilhelm. Der Ursprung der Gottesidee. 12 vols. Munster, 1912-1955.
See especially volume 6, pages 274-281, 444-455; volume 8, pages 595-633;
and volume 12, pages 389-441, 826-836, and 845-847.
Schmidt, Wilhelm. "Ethnologische Bemerkungen zu theologischen Opfertheorien."
In Jahrbuch des Missionshauses St. Gabriel, vol. 1. Modling, 1922.
Smith, W. Robertson. Lectures on the Religion of the Semites: The Fundamental
Institutions (1889). 3d ed. Reprint, New York, 1969.
Tylor, E. B. Primitive Culture (1871). 2 vols. Reprint, New York, 1970.
Vorbichler, Anton. Das Opfer auf den uns heute noch erreichbaren altesten
Stufen der Menschheitsgeschichte: Eine Begriffsstudie. Modling, 1956.
Widengren, Geo. Religionsphanomenologie. Berlin, 1969.
Additional literature is found in the works cited in the article, especially
those by Hubert and Mauss, Loisy, Schmidt, Bertholet, van der Leeuw, Henninger,
Lanternari, Heiler, James, and Widengren, as well as in Le sacrifice, especially
volume 1.
JOSEPH HENNINGER Translated from German by Matthew J. O'Connell |