Fermentum is a practice of the Early Christian Church whereby bishops affirmed their communion with one another. The custom of the fermentum was first practiced as early as 120 A.D. A particle of the Eucharistic bread was carried by a minister of the Church from the bishop of one diocese to the bishop of another diocese. The receiving bishop would then consume the species at his next celebration of the Eucharist as a sign of the communion between the churches.
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- Fermentum is a practice of the Early Christian Church whereby bishops affirmed their communion with one another. The custom of the fermentum was first practiced as early as 120 A.D. A particle of the Eucharistic bread was carried by a minister of the Church from the bishop of one diocese to the bishop of another diocese. The receiving bishop would then consume the species at his next celebration of the Eucharist as a sign of the communion between the churches. The term fermentum was likely a reference to the Eucharist as the leaven of the Christian life, and the instrument by which Christians spread throughout the world were united in the one Body of Christ as a leaven to the world. In the second century, popes are known to have sent the Eucharist to other bishops as a pledge of unity of faith, this being the origin of the expression to be in communion with each other, already considered essential to Christianity in the second century writings of St. Ignatius of Antioch and St. Irenaeus. On occasion, bishops would also send out fermenti to their priests. John. D. Zizioulas (the Metropolitan of Pergamon) in his doctoral thesis (1964 University of Athens) takes the position that by the mid third century the Bishops were exercising fermentum with the (local to the Metropolitan) parishes that did have a presiding Bishop in order to communicate/retain the unity of the Church under the Bishop. While this was due to the growth of the Christian church it is also due to extensive persecution of the Church, especially aimed at the Bishops.
- Il Fermentum è una pratica della Chiesa cristiana delle origini, con cui i vescovi affermavano la comunione tra di loro. Il fermentum è stato praticato a partire dal 120 d.C. Una particola di Eucarestia veniva trasportata tramite un ministro della Chiesa, dal vescovo di una diocesi a quello di un'altra. Il vescovo ricevente consumava in seguito la particola ricevuta nella successiva celebrazione eucaristica, come segno della comunione tra le chiese. Il termine fermentum era probabilmente un riferimento all'Eucarestia come lievito della vita cristiana, e come strumento tramite il quale i Cristiani diffusi nel mondo vengono uniti nell'unico Corpo di Cristo, come lievito del mondo. Nel II secolo i Papi inviavano l'Eucaristia ad altri vescovi come una testimonianza dell'unità della fede, dando origine in questo modo all'espressione essere in comunione con gli altri, già considerata essenziale per la Cristianità negli scritti del secondo secolo di Sant'Ignazio di Antiochia e Sant'Ireneo. Occasionalmente, i vescovi inviavano il fermentum anche ai sacerdoti delle loro comunità.
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- Fermentum is a practice of the Early Christian Church whereby bishops affirmed their communion with one another. The custom of the fermentum was first practiced as early as 120 A.D. A particle of the Eucharistic bread was carried by a minister of the Church from the bishop of one diocese to the bishop of another diocese. The receiving bishop would then consume the species at his next celebration of the Eucharist as a sign of the communion between the churches.
- Il Fermentum è una pratica della Chiesa cristiana delle origini, con cui i vescovi affermavano la comunione tra di loro. Il fermentum è stato praticato a partire dal 120 d.C. Una particola di Eucarestia veniva trasportata tramite un ministro della Chiesa, dal vescovo di una diocesi a quello di un'altra. Il vescovo ricevente consumava in seguito la particola ricevuta nella successiva celebrazione eucaristica, come segno della comunione tra le chiese.
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