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SERAPION, or SARAPION

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 662 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SERAPION, or SARAPION  Or . C . 350), bishop of Thmuis in the Nile Delta and a prominent supporter of Athanasius in the struggle against Arianism (sometimes called, for his learning, Scholasticus), is best known in connexion with a prayer-
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book or sacramentary intended for the use of bishops . This document, contained in a collection of
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Egyptian documents in an Irthcentury MS. at the Laura on Mount Athos, was published by A . Dmitrijewskij in 1894, but attracted little attention until independently discovered and published by G . Wobbermin in 1899 . It is a celebrant's book, containing
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thirty prayers belonging to the mass (19-30, 1-6),
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baptism (7-11, 15, 16), ordination (I2-14), benediction of oil,
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bread and
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water (17), and
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burial (18), omitting the fixed structural formulae of the
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rites, the parts of the other ministers, and almost all rubrication, except what is implied in the titles of the prayers . The name of Serapion is prefixed to the anaphora of the mass (1) and to the
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group 15-18: but whether this indicates authorship is doubtful; for whereas the whole collection is bound together by certain marks of vocabulary, style and thought, 15-18 have characteristics of their own not shared by the anaphora, while no
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part of the collection shows
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special
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affinities with the current
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works of Serapion .l But his name is at least a symbol of probable date and provenance: the
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theology, which is orthodox so far as it goes, but " conservative," and perhaps glancing at Arianism, shows no sign that the Macedonian question has arisen; the doxologies, of a type abandoned by the orthodox, and by c . 370 treated by Didymus of Alexandria as heretical; the apparent presupposition that the population is mainly pagan (1, 2o); the exclusive appropriation of the mass to
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Sunday (19; cp .
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Ath. ap. c . Ar . whereas the liturgical observance of Saturday prevailed in
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Egypt by c .

38o; the terms in which

monasticism is referred to—together point to c . 350: the occurrence of official interpreters (25) points to a bilingual Church, i.e .
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Syria or Egypt; and certain theological phrases (uyEPI97TOS, iamb µia, µdv,l KLLOoXLK17 EKKA'7eia) characteristic of the old Egyptian creed, and the liturgical characteristics, indicate Egypt; while the petition for rains (23), without reference to the Nile-rising, points to the Delta as distinguished from Upper Egypt . The book is important, therefore, as the earliest liturgical collection on so large a scale, and as belonging to Egypt, where evidence for 4th -century ritual is scanty as compared with Syria . The rites form a
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link between those of the Egyptian Church Order (a 3rd- or early 4th-century development of the Hippolytean Canons, which are perhaps Egyptian of c . 26o) and later Egyptian rites—marking the stage of development reached in Egypt by c . 350, while exhibiting characteristics of their own . I . The Mass has the Egyptian notes—a prayer before the lections, elsewhere unknown in the East; an exceptionally weighty
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body of intercessions after the catechumens' dismissal, followed by a penitential act, probably identical with the E o7.LoXbyr7vls of Can . Hippol . 2, which disappeared in later rites; a setting of the Sanctus found in several Egyptian ana•-phoras; the close connexion of the commemorations of the offerers and of the dead; and the form of the conclusion of the anaphora . The structure of the communion—with a prayer before and prayers of thanksgiving and blessing after—shows that Egypt had already
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developed the
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common type, otherwise first evidenced in Syria, c .

375 (Ap . Const. viii . 13) . Among the special characteristics of Serapion are the simplicity of the Sanctus, and of the Institution, which lacks the dramatic additions already found in Ap . Const.; the

interpolation of a passage containing a
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quotation from Didache 9 between the institutions of the bread and of the chalice; the form of the ava7. viyrls; and the invocation of the Word, not of the
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Holy Ghost, to effect consecration . That the Lord's Prayer before communion is not referred to may be only because it is a fixed formula belonging to the structure of the rite . II . The Order of Baptism has a form for the consecration of the water, and a preliminary prayer for the candidates, perhaps alluding to their exorcism; a prayer 1 These are: a vigorous and acute refutation of the Manichaeans, and some letters . A book on the titles of the Psalms has not survived . for steadfastness following the renunciation and the confession of faith; the form of
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anointing with oil; appropriate prayers preceding and following the act of baptism; and the prayer of confirmation with imposition of the hand, chrism and
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crossing . All this corresponds to and fills up the outline of the Church Order and allusions in 4th-century writers, and is in
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line with later Egyptian rites . III. jForms of Ordination are provided only for deacons, presbyters and bishops, the orders of divine institution (12) .

_ They are concise, but of the normal type . That for deacons (12) commemorates St

Stephen, invokes the Holy Ghost, and prays for the gifts qualifying for the diaconate . That for presbyters (13) recalls the Mosaic LXX, invokes the Holy Ghost, and asks for the gifts qualifying for administration, teaching, and the
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ministry of reconciliation . That for bishops (14) appeals to the
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mission of our Lord, the election of the apostles, and the apostolic succession, and asks for the " Divine Spirit " conferred on prophets and patriarchs, that the subject may " feed the
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flock " " unblamably and without offence continue in " his office . The minor orders, interpreters, readers and subdeacons (25) are evidently, as elsewhere in the
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middle of the 4th century, appointed without sacramental ordination . IV . The use of exorcised or blessed oil, water and bread is fully illustrated by the lives of the fathers of the
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desert (cp. the Gnostic use, Clem . Al . Excerpta 82) . Serapion has a form of benediction of oil and water (5) offered in the mass (like Can . Hippol. and Ch . Ord. for oil), probably for the use of individual offerers .

A longer form. for all three matters (17) perhaps has in view the

general needs of the Church in the visitation of the sick . The occurrence in both prayers of " the Name " and the
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commemoration of the Passion, Resurrection, &c., corresponds with early allusions, in Origen and elsewhere, to the usual form of exorcism . V . For burial of the dead Serapion gives a prayer for the departed and the survivors (18) . But the funeral procession is alluded to (EKKOE4oj4VOV), and in the mass (r) the particular commemoration of departed persons is provided for . Hence we have the elements of the 4th-century funeral, as we know it in Egypt and elsewhere: a preliminary office (of readings and psalms) to which the prayer belongs, the procession (with psalmody) to the cemetery, the burial and the mass
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pro domitione .

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