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Dietary Laws among Pythagoreans, Jews, and Christians
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 June 2011
Extract
Dietary laws, as well as problems in regard to their observance, are prevalent in religious groups even today and were fairly common in antiquity. Outsiders and insiders as well often wondered what the point of the laws was, and in three significant communities—Pythagoreans, Jews, and Christians—the regulations were interpreted, or interpreted away, with the help of philosophical or even historical analysis.
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References
1 The basic studies are those of Boehm, F., De symbolis pythagoreis (Diss., Berlin, 1905)Google Scholar; Delatte, A., Etudes sur la littérature pythagoriciene (Paris, 1915) 285–307Google Scholar; Nilsson, M. P., Geschichte der griechischen Religion (2d ed.; Munich, 1955) 1. 703–8Google Scholar; Marcovich, M., “Pythagorica,” Philologus 108 (1964) 29–44 (esp. 43–44).Google Scholar
2 Frg. Gr. Hist. 273 F. 94 (Clement Str. 1.70.1); cf. Diog. Laert. 8.24.36.
3 Frag. 6 Walzer (Diog. Laert. 1.8; Pliny N.H. 30.3).
4 Aristotle (2d ed.; Oxford, 1948) 455–56Google Scholar.
5 A. Gellius 4.11.12–13; cf. also Diog. Laert. 8.34.
6 Diog. Laert. 8.19.
7 Ibid., 8.34–35.
8 Delatte, Etudes, 288.
9 Marcovich, “Pythagorica,” 43–44.
10 A. Gellius 4.11.4–6; similar but expanded, Diog. Laert. 8.20.
11 Diog. Laert. 8.34 and 19. In his Quaest. conviv. Plutarch speaks of abstinence from the white cock, the red mullet, and the sea-nettle (670D), and also refers to abstinence “especially from fish” (728D).
12 Rhet. graec. III, p. 194, 3–5 Spengel.
13 P. 12E—F.
14 Athenaeus 452D.
15 Diog. Laert. 8.18.
16 Porphyry Vit. Pyth. 42–45.
17 Iamblichus Vit. Pyth. 83–86; 152–56; Protr. 21.
18 Philo, Quod omn. prob. 2.
19 Str. 5.45.2–3; 7.33.7.
20 Str. 5.30.5. He discusses beans apart from the symbol; cf. 3.24.2.
21 Str. 7.33.7; Plutarch Tranq. 472B; Esu carn. 995E; cf. Theopompus in Athenaeus 4.157D; Pliny N.H. 14.58; also Corssen, P., “Die Schrift des Arztes Androkydes ΠΕΡΙ ΠϒΘΑΓΟΡΙΚΩΝ ΣϒΜΒΛΩΝ,” Rhein. Mus. 67 (1912) 240–63.Google Scholar
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26 Ep. Arist. 146.165–66 (cf. Eusebius. P.E. 8.9.16.31–32).
27 Agric. 131.
28 Spec. 4.100–105 (on the goodness of fish and pork, Plutarch Fort. 98E).
29 Spec. 4.106–18
30 Ant. 3.259–60.
31 4 Macc 2:33–34; 1:1.
32 C. Ap. 2.282.
33 Cf. esp. Conzelmann, H., Die Apostelgeschichte (Tübingen, 1963) 84–85;Google ScholarHaenchen, E., The Acts of the Apostles (Philadelphia, 1971) 468–72;Google ScholarMolland, E., “La circoncision, le baptême et l'autorité du décret apostolique dans les milieux judéochrétien des Pseudo-Clémentines,” StTh 9 (1955) 1–39Google Scholar; Simon, M., “De l'observance rituelle de l'ascèse: recherches sur le Décret Apostolique,” RHR 193 (1978) 27–104.Google Scholar
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35 Didache 6.2 (interpolated, according to Audet, J.-P., La Didachè: Instruction des Apôtres [Paris, 1958] 350–57).Google Scholar
36 Didasc. 23, pp. 202–3 Connally = 6.10, 3–4 Funk = Const. Apost. 6.10.2–3.
37 Const. Apost. 7.20: every kind of meat, but not blood, after Deut 15:23; also “the fat of the land,” Gen 45:18.
38 Eusebius H.E. 5.1.26.
39 Irenaeus Adv. haer. 3.12.14.
40 Tertullian Pudic. 12.4–5.
41 Apol. 9.13–14; cf. Barrett, C. K., “Things Sacrificed to Idols,” NTS 11 (1964/1965) 138–53.Google Scholar
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43 Cf. Chadwick, H., The Sentences of Sextus (Cambridge, 1959) 24, no. 109; also p. 108, with reference to Clement Str. 7.32.8.Google Scholar
44 Virt. 146; Spec. 1.266.
45 1 Cor 9:9–10.
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47 Kraft, , Barnabas and the Didache (New York, 1965) 109–12.Google Scholar
48 Str. 2.67.1–3.
49 Paed. 2.84–88, with passages from Aristotle cited by Stählin.
50 Paed. 2.7.4
51 References from LSJ s. v. tragelaphos (except for Philo).
52 Paed. 2.120.1; 3.26.2; Origen C. Cels. 4.24. The basic passage is Origen Princ. 4.3.2.
53 Aelian Nat. anim. 2.46; 9.10.
54 Pliny N.H. 10.8.
55 Irenaeus Adv. haer. 4.14.1; Origen Matt. ser. 47.
56 Didache 9.5; Naassenes in Hippolytus Ref. 5.8.34 (interpreting as if “dogs” and “swine” reflected the usage of Aristophanes).
57 Basilidians in Epiphanius 24.5.2; Elchasai in Hippolytus Ref. 9.7.1; Clement Str. 1.55.3; 2.7.4; Tertullian Praescr. 26.1; 41.2; Bapt. 18.1; Ad. ux. 5.5.2 (porcus = non-Christian husband); Origen C. Cels. 5.29.
58 Methodius De creatis 1, P. 493–94 Bonwetsch.
59 The swine recur in Mark 5:11–13, whatever that may mean.
60 Diog. Laert. 8.35.
61 Origen Matt. comm. 9.17, p. 64, 18 Klostermann. Metempsychosis and dogs are connected in Pythagorean tradition according to Diog. Laert. 8.36.
62 Diog. Laert. 8.35.
63 Matt 11:29–30; cf. Iamblichus Vit. Pyth. 84. Since Plutarch (290E and 727C) and Hippolytus (Ref. 6.27.4) have “Don't step over a broom” instead of “Don't step over a balance” (e.g., the Suda in Diels-Kranz, Vorsokratiker 58 C 6), the parallel cannot be more than verbal.
64 Matt 7:13–14; cf., e.g., Clement Str. 2.79.2; 5.30.1.
65 Luke 9:59–62; 17:31; Diog. Laert. 8.17.
66 Luke 10:4; cf. Plutarch 96A.
67 On Pythagorean phrases in Acts cf. Conzelmann, Apostelgeschichte, 31; on “one” cf. Clement Str. 4.151.3.
68 Gos. Thom. 11, 22, 106.
69 Str. 1.72.4; 2.100.3.
70 C Cels. 5.55; 7.20.
71 de Lange, N. R. M., Origen and the Jews (Cambridge, 1976) 16.Google Scholar
72 Str. 7.32.5 (Sent. 46 ascribed to Pythagoras; elsewhere anonymous citations); not a Pythagorean according to Origen C. Cels. 8.30.
73 Clement Paed. 1.94.1; Hippolytus Ref. 6.23.4. Collections of symbols in Clement Str. 5.27–31; Hippolytus Ref. 6.26–27.
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