Cyril of Jerusalem — Mystagogical Catecheses

Five post-baptismal lectures delivered at the Holy Sepulchre c. AD 350 — the most systematic early treatment of the sacraments, including the clearest patristic account of Real Presence and the Epiclesis.

c. AD 350 Greek Intermediate 9 annotated chapters
Editor's Introduction

The Mystagogical Catecheses are five lectures delivered by Cyril of Jerusalem (or possibly his successor John) to the newly baptised in the week following Easter, c. AD 350. They are addressed to those who have just received Baptism, Confirmation, and their first Eucharist, and they explain — for the first time — the full meaning of what was done to them and what they received.\n\nThe Catecheses are the most systematic early treatment of the sacraments as a unified whole. No other document of comparable antiquity explains Baptism, Chrismation, and the Eucharist in such detail, with such theological precision, and with such attention to the specific words and gestures of the liturgy.\n\nThree features make them uniquely valuable for apologetics. First, they are delivered in Jerusalem, at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, yards from the sites of the Crucifixion and Resurrection — a geographical concreteness that permeates the theological argument. Second, they are addressed to recent converts explaining what they have already received, not to theologians speculating about what the sacraments might mean. Third, they date to a period when the Arian controversy was at its height — yet Cyril’s Eucharistic theology shows no sign of being a contested novelty. He explains Real Presence, the sacrificial character of the Mass, and the intercession of the saints as standard elements of Christian formation.\n\nTranslation: Revised Church translation, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Series 2, vol. 7, 1894 (Public Domain).

Prologue
The Discipline of the Secret
Sacraments Eucharist

I have long been wishing, O true-born and dearly beloved children of the Church, to discourse to you concerning these spiritual, and heavenly Mysteries; but since I well knew that seeing is far more persuasive than hearing, I waited for the present season; that finding you more open to the influence of my words from your present experience, I might take and lead you to the brighter and more fragrant meadow of the Paradise before us.

For ye are now capable of receiving the more Divine Mysteries, after having been found worthy of Divine and life-giving Baptism. Since therefore it remains to set before you a table of the more perfect instructions, let us now teach you these things exactly, that ye may know the effect wrought upon you on that evening of your Baptism.

Annotation: The Discipline of the Secret — Why the Catecheses Come After Baptism

Cyril's opening explains the ancient practice of the disciplina arcani — the discipline of the secret — whereby the full explanation of the sacraments was withheld from catechumens and given only after they had received Baptism. The reasons are pastoral and theological at once. Pastorally: the unbaptised had not yet experienced the realities being described, and description without experience breeds superficial knowledge. Theologically: the sacraments are mysteries in the strict sense — actions of God that exceed human comprehension and are entered into before they are fully understood. The implication for apologetics is important. Cyril is not speculating about what the Eucharist or Baptism might mean. He is explaining, to people who have just received them, what they have already experienced. The descriptions that follow are not theological proposals but explanations of completed acts. When Cyril says the bread is the Body of Christ, he is telling the newly baptised what they already received at the altar. The clarity of this context destroys any interpretation of his language as merely symbolic.

I
First Mystagogical Catechesis — Renunciation of Satan and Profession of Faith
Sacraments Scripture

First ye entered into the vestibule of the Baptistery, and there facing towards the West ye heard the command to stretch forth your hand, and as in the presence of Satan ye renounced him. Now ye must know that this figure is found in ancient history. For when Pharaoh, that most bitter and cruel tyrant, was oppressing the free and high-born people of the Hebrews, God sent Moses to bring them out of the evil thrall of the Egyptians. Then the door-posts were anointed with the blood of a lamb, that the destroyer might flee from the houses which had the sign of the blood; and the Hebrew people was marvellously delivered.

After this, therefore, having renounced Satan and disbelieved in him, remember that ye turned from the West to the East, the place of lights. For it was at this point that ye were told to say, I believe in the Father, and in the Son, and in the Holy Ghost, and in one Baptism of repentance.

Annotation: The Rites of Renunciation — Typological Structure of Baptism

Cyril's account of the pre-baptismal rites reveals the deliberately structured typology that governed early Christian liturgy. Facing west to renounce Satan was not arbitrary ceremony; the west, where the sun sets and darkness begins, was the direction associated with the dominion of the adversary. Facing east to profess faith was equally deliberate: the rising sun was an ancient symbol of Christ, and the baptismal profession of faith was an act of turning toward the light. The Exodus typology — Pharaoh as Satan, Egypt as bondage, the Passover lamb as Christ, the crossing as Baptism — was not a post-hoc homiletical decoration. It was the interpretive framework within which the liturgy itself was constructed. Cyril is explaining to the newly baptised that what they did in the Baptistery was a participation in the great acts of salvation history, not merely a private religious ceremony. The apologetic weight is considerable: writing c. AD 350 in Jerusalem, Cyril describes the sacramental rites as already possessing this fully developed typological structure. This is not a late development. The liturgical logic he explains belongs to the foundational layer of Christian worship.

II
Second Mystagogical Catechesis — The Baptism Itself
Sacraments Scripture

Then you were led to the holy pool of Divine Baptism, as Christ was carried from the Cross to the Sepulchre which is before our eyes. And each of you was asked, whether he believed in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, and ye made that saving confession, and descended three times into the water, and ascended again; here also covertly pointing by a figure to the three-days burial of Christ.

For as our Saviour passed three days and three nights in the heart of the earth, so you also in your first ascent out of the water, represented the first day of Christ in the earth, and by your descent, the night. For as he who is in the night, no longer sees, but he who is in the day, remains in the light; so in the descent, as in the night, ye saw nothing, but in ascending again ye were as in the day.

Annotation: Baptism as Death and Resurrection — The Triple Immersion

The triple immersion and triple profession — descending and ascending three times — is interpreted by Cyril as a participation in the three days of Christ's burial and resurrection. This is not allegorical decoration after the fact; it is the theological structure that determined the form of the rite from the beginning. Paul's statement in Romans 6 that baptism is a dying and rising with Christ is here given its liturgical embodiment. Two features deserve attention. First: the neophytes are not told that the water symbolised death and resurrection. They are told that they actually died and rose with Christ. The language is unambiguous — the descent was your death, the ascent was your resurrection. Second: Cyril notes the deliberate likeness to the tomb before his listeners' eyes. He is delivering this catechesis in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, yards from where Christ was buried. The proximity of the sacred site is itself part of the argument. Baptism is not a ritual enactment of an absent event; it is a participation in an event whose location can be pointed to.

III
Third Mystagogical Catechesis — The Chrism
Sacraments

Having been baptised into Christ, and put on Christ, ye have been made conformable to the Son of God; for God having predestinated us unto the adoption of children, made us to share the fashion of Christ's glorious body. Being therefore made partakers of Christ, ye are properly called Christs, and of you God said, Touch not My Christs, or anointed.

Now ye were made Christs, by receiving the emblem of the Holy Ghost; and all things were in a figure wrought in you, because ye are figures of Christ. He also bathed Himself in the river Jordan, and having imparted of the fragrance of His Godhead to the waters, He came up from them; and the Holy Ghost in the substantial presence visited Him, like resting upon like. So in like manner to you, after you had come up from the pool of the sacred streams, was given the Unction, the emblem of that wherewith Christ was anointed; and this is the Holy Ghost.

Annotation: Confirmation as a Distinct Sacrament — The Chrism as the Seal of the Holy Spirit

Cyril's account of the post-baptismal anointing is one of the clearest early attestations of what later theology would call Confirmation as a distinct sacramental act. The Chrism (the anointing oil) is not merely a ceremonial addition to Baptism; it is the seal of the Holy Spirit, the embodiment of the Pentecost given to each individual. The logic is christological: as Jesus received the Spirit at His baptism in the Jordan, so the newly baptised receive the Spirit after their baptism. The phrase Cyril uses — the substantial presence of the Holy Spirit — is noteworthy. He is not describing a symbolic gesture toward an absent reality but the actual conferral of the Spirit upon the recipient through the physical sign. The oil is the vehicle of a real spiritual event. This is the consistent logic of Cyril's sacramental theology throughout the Catecheses: the visible sign does not point to the invisible gift as a substitute for it; the visible sign is the means through which the invisible gift is given.

IV.1-3
Fourth Mystagogical Catechesis — This is My Body
Eucharist Sacraments Scripture

The Lord Jesus the same night in which He was betrayed, took bread; and when He had given thanks, He brake it, and said, Take, eat, this is My Body; and having taken the cup and given thanks, He said, Take, drink, this is My Blood. Since then He Himself declared and said of the Bread, This is My Body, who shall dare to doubt any longer? And since He has Himself affirmed and said, This is My Blood, who shall ever hesitate, saying, that it is not His Blood?

He once in Cana of Galilee, turned the water into wine, akin to blood, and is it incredible that He should have turned wine into Blood? That wonderful work He miraculously wrought, when called to an earthly marriage; and shall He not much rather be acknowledged to have bestowed the fruition of His Body and Blood on the children of the bride-chamber?

Annotation: The Real Presence — The Words of Institution as the Ground of Faith

Cyril's argument for the Real Presence is as simple and as powerful as any in patristic literature: Christ said it. The words of institution — This is My Body, This is My Blood — are the decisive evidence, and no further argument is needed once they are accepted as the words of God incarnate. The rhetorical structure deserves attention. Cyril does not begin with philosophical analysis of how the change is possible. He begins with the authority of the one who said it. Who shall dare to doubt? Who shall ever hesitate? The questions are not rhetorical decoration; they are the actual content of the argument. If Jesus is who Christians believe him to be — the Son of God incarnate — then his words carry divine authority, and the question of whether the bread and wine are truly his Body and Blood is settled by the fact that he said so. The analogy to Cana is a fortiori: if Christ could turn water into wine at a wedding feast, the lesser miracle of turning wine into his Blood at the Last Supper is not merely possible but to be expected. The God who performs the greater wonder will not withhold the lesser one from his own children.

IV.4-9
Fourth Mystagogical Catechesis — Do Not Judge by Appearance
Eucharist Sacraments Scripture

Wherefore with full assurance let us partake as of the Body and Blood of Christ: for in the figure of Bread is given to thee His Body, and in the figure of Wine His Blood; that thou by partaking of the Body and Blood of Christ, mayest be made of the same body and the same blood with Him. For thus we come to bear Christ in us, because His Body and Blood are distributed through our members; thus it is that, according to the blessed Peter, we become partakers of the divine nature.

Judge not therefore from the taste, but from faith be fully assured without misgiving, that the Body and Blood of Christ have been vouchsafed to thee. The blessed David also gives a hint of this saying: Thou hast prepared a table before me against them that afflict me: and what he says amounts to this: Before Thy coming, evil spirits prepared tables for men, polluted and defiled and full of Satanic influence; but since Thy coming, O Lord, Thou hast prepared a table before me.

Annotation: Judge Not by Taste but by Faith — the Eucharistic Realism of Cyril

The phrase judge not from the taste, but from faith be fully assured is among the most quoted sentences in the Eucharistic catecheses of the early Church, and with good reason. It presupposes the full reality of what it urges the neophytes not to deny. One only instructs people not to judge by taste if the taste genuinely does not correspond to the reality — that is, if the bread and wine taste like bread and wine but are in fact the Body and Blood of Christ. Cyril does not say the bread and wine represent the Body and Blood, or symbolise them, or make us think of them. He says they have been vouchsafed to thee. The Eucharist is a bestowal, not a representation. The goal of receiving it is to bear Christ in us — not to remember Christ, not to be inspired by Christ, but to carry his actual Body and Blood in our members. The language of partaking of the divine nature (a direct citation of 2 Peter 1:4) locates the Eucharist within the larger economy of deification: receiving the Body and Blood of Christ is one of the primary means by which human beings are made to participate in the divine life.

V.1-8
Fifth Mystagogical Catechesis — The Epiclesis
Eucharist Sacraments

After this, the Priest cries aloud, Lift up your hearts. Then ye answer, We lift them up unto the Lord. Truly ought we in that most awful hour to have our heart on high with God, and not below, thinking of earth and earthly things.

Afterwards the Priest says, Let us give thanks unto the Lord. Then ye say, It is meet and right. For in that we give thanks, we do a meet thing and a right. Then we make mention of Heaven, and earth, and sea; of sun and moon; of stars and all the creation, rational and irrational, visible and invisible; of Angels, Archangels, Virtues, Dominions, Principalities, Powers, Thrones; of the Cherubim with many faces: in effect repeating that call of David's, O magnify the Lord with me. We make mention also of the Seraphim, whom Esaias in the Holy Ghost beheld standing around the throne of God.

Then having sanctified ourselves by these spiritual Hymns, we call upon the merciful God to send forth His Holy Spirit upon the gifts lying before Him; that He may make the Bread the Body of Christ, and the Wine the Blood of Christ; for whatsoever the Holy Ghost has touched, is surely sanctified and changed.

Annotation: The Epiclesis — The Spirit Makes the Bread the Body of Christ

The account of the Epiclesis — the invocation of the Holy Spirit over the Eucharistic gifts — is one of the most theologically significant passages in the Catecheses. We call upon the merciful God to send forth His Holy Spirit upon the gifts lying before Him; that He may make the Bread the Body of Christ, and the Wine the Blood of Christ. Two things demand attention. First: the language of change. Cyril does not say the Spirit confirms our understanding of the bread as symbolic of the Body, or deepens our appreciation of what the Body signifies. He says the Spirit makes the Bread the Body of Christ. The verb is causative and definite. Second: the principle given for why the Spirit's action is decisive — whatsoever the Holy Ghost has touched, is surely sanctified and changed. This is the theological warrant for the Epiclesis: the same Spirit who overshadowed Mary and brought about the Incarnation, who descended on Jesus at the Jordan, who animated the apostles at Pentecost, now descends on the bread and wine and effects a comparable transformation. The logic is consistent: wherever the Holy Spirit acts in power, the created reality is changed at the level of what it truly is.

V.9-10
Fifth Mystagogical Catechesis — The Intercession of Saints
Eucharist Sacraments Eschatology

Then, after the spiritual sacrifice, the bloodless service, is completed, over that sacrifice of propitiation we entreat God for the common peace of the Church, for the welfare of the world; for kings; for soldiers and allies; for the sick; for the afflicted; and in a word, for all who stand in need of succour we all pray and offer this sacrifice.

Then we commemorate also those who have fallen asleep before us, first Patriarchs, Prophets, Apostles, Martyrs, that at their prayers and intercessions God would receive our petition. Afterwards also on behalf of the Holy Fathers and Bishops who have fallen asleep before us, and in a word of all who in past years have fallen asleep among us, believing that it will be a very great benefit to the souls of those, for whom the supplication is put up, while that holy and most awful sacrifice is presented.

Annotation: The Eucharist as a Sacrifice — The Intercession of the Departed

Cyril's description of the Eucharistic prayer as a sacrifice of propitiation is among the clearest early attestations of the sacrificial character of the Eucharist. The spiritual sacrifice and bloodless service are not euphemisms for a memorial meal; they are the terms used to describe an act that is offered over, and in connection with which petition is made to God. The Eucharist is presented to God as well as received by the faithful. The intercession for the departed is equally significant. Cyril not only describes the practice of praying for the dead at the Eucharist — he provides a theological rationale: it is a very great benefit to the souls of those for whom the supplication is put up when the holy and most awful sacrifice is presented. The souls of the departed can be helped by the prayers of the living at the Eucharist. This is not a medieval elaboration. It is c. AD 350, in Jerusalem, delivered to newly baptised Christians as part of their basic formation in the faith.

V.19-22
Fifth Mystagogical Catechesis — The Our Father and the Communion
Eucharist Sacraments

After this the Priest says, Holy things to holy men. Holy are the gifts presented; holy are ye who have been deemed worthy of the Holy Ghost; the holy things therefore correspond with the holy persons. Then ye say, One is Holy, one is the Lord, Jesus Christ. For one is truly holy, by nature holy; we too are holy, but not by nature, only by participation, and discipline, and prayer.

Afterwards the Deacon cries, Receive ye the Holy Communion, and approach ye every one. Approach not with your wrists extended, or your fingers spread; but make your left hand a throne for the right, as for that which is to receive a King. And hollowing your palm, receive the Body of Christ, saying over it, Amen. So then after having carefully hallowed your eyes by the touch of the Holy Body, partake of it; giving heed lest you lose any portion thereof.

Annotation: The Manner of Receiving — The Body of Christ Is a King

The instruction for receiving Communion — make your left hand a throne for the right, as for that which is to receive a King — is one of the most vivid and theologically dense passages in the Catecheses. The gesture is not a matter of decorum; it is a bodily enactment of the faith that what is about to be received is the Body of Christ. The hands form a throne because a King is coming. Two further details are apologetically significant. First: the instruction to hollow the palm to receive the Body of Christ, saying over it Amen. The Amen is the worshipper's personal act of assent to the reality of what is received — a spoken affirmation that this is indeed the Body of Christ. Second: the instruction to hallow the eyes by touching them with the Holy Body before consuming it. The consecrated Bread is treated as holy not because it symbolises something holy but because it is something holy. The treatment of the elements in the liturgy is itself a form of doctrine. No church that taught the Eucharist was merely a memorial would instruct communicants to touch their eyes with the bread before eating it.

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