Online Encyclopedia

AGNUS DEI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 380 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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AGNUS DEI  , the figure of a

lamb bearing a
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cross, symbolical of the Saviour as the " Lamb of
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God." The
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device is
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common in ecclesiastical
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art, but the name is especially given in the Church of Rome to a small cake made of the
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wax of the
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Easter candles and impressed with this figure . Since the 9th century it has been customary for the popes to bless these cakes, and distribute them on the
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Sunday after Easter among the faithful, by whom they are highly prized as having the power to avert evil . In
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modern times the distribution has been limited to persons of distinction, and is made by the pope on his accession and every seven years thereafter . A gnus Dei is also the popular name for the
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anthem beginning with these words, which is said to have been introduced into the
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missal by Pope
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Sergius I . (687-701) . Based upon John i . 29, the Latin form is A gnus Dei, qui tollis peccata mundi, miserere nobis . In the celebration of the mass it is repeated three times before the communion, and it is also appended to many of the litanies . By the
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judgment in the case of " Read and others v . The Bishop of Lincoln " it was decided in 1890 that the singing of the A gnus Dei in
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English by the choir during the administration of the
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Holy Communion, provided that the reception ofthe elements be not delayed till its conclusion, is not illegal in the Church of England . For the various ceremonies in the blessing of the Agnus Dei see A . Vacant, Dict. de theologie (cols .

6o5-613) .

End of Article: AGNUS DEI
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