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The Last Supper: A Study in Group Dynamics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2024

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In 1942 Fritz Redl put forward a paper in which he considered group formation around a central person. He formulated ten categories and one of these seems of especial interest when we consider the formation around Christ at the time of the Last Supper.

One might have thought that the apostolic group would have fallen into Redl’s fourth category, that of a group which has ‘The central person as a love object’. Tentatively it is here suggested that this was not the case and that the apostolic group might more fittingly be considered as falling into Redl’s fifth category, that of a group that has ‘The central person as the object of aggressive drives’.

It must be stated at the outset that the suggestions put forward by Redl concerned a group in which there was recognition of the aggression that was prevalent. For the purpose of this article it is assumed that the apostolic group not only gave no overt sign of their aggression but it is likely that it was so repressed that they did not even know it was there.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1968 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 Group Emotions and Leadership’, by Redl, Fritz. Psychiatry. Vol. V, No. 4, 1942, pp. 575585Google Scholar.

1 Jesus in His Time, by Daniel Rops.