See also: agapetae

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Noun edit

Agapetae pl (plural only)

  1. Women of the early Christian church who cohabited in a state of "spiritual love" with clergy or laymen who had vowed chastity.
    • 1820, Polwhele, The enthusiasm of Methodists and Papists considered by .Bishop Lavington, page 298:
      He was instructed and assisted by Agape, an honourable woman, in carrying on the secret mysteries ; and she was the mother of the Agapetae, or love-feasters ; whose rites became by degrees so very scandalous, that St. Jerome tells Oceanus "you are exposed to the teeth of detractors, unless you dismiss the assemblies of the Agapetae."
    • 2007, Alvin Boyd Kuhn, Who Is This King of Glory?:, →ISBN, page 175:
      It describes the Agapetae as virgins who consecrated themselves to God with a vow of chastity and associated with laymen who like themselves had taken a vow of chastity.
    • 2008, Jacob A. v Belzen, Jacob Adrianus Belzen, & Antoon Geels, Autobiography and the Psychological Study of Religious Lives, →ISBN:
      The novel itself suggests that Huxley knew about this attempt to go beyond gender, that the earliest Christian priests had Agapetae, or female ritual lovers, and that both the early Christian Gnostics and the later Catholic moralists permitted a form of coitus reservatus, the latter "claiming that it was known to Adam in the Garden and therefore a part of Paradise."

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