The story can be reconstructed using the various versions by late antiquty authors. Arnobius and Clement's works, two of the fullest sources for the tale, were attacks on the old religion from a Christian perspective or attempts to ridicule and show the obscenity of pagan beliefs; Clement denounced the sexual elements of the cults of Dionysus and
Demeter, while Arnobius states that Dionysus experienced pleasure from the act. They are not however the only sources of the tale. The myth seems to have been used to explain the wide use of phalli in the procession rituals in the cult of Dionysus.
Karl Kerenyi suggested the myth was
aition for the employment of phallic mortuary monuments in tombs. It is tied to 'Androgynos' an epithet of Dionysus meaning 'effeminate' or 'hermaphroditic', denoting taking both active male roles and passive female ones.
Gregorius of Nazianzus also called Dionysus an
androgynos while briefly hinting to the myth of Prosymnus.
Pausanias mentions nocturnal rites in honour of Dionysus at the lake, but refuses to elaborate on what those were. Those rites were likely secret, but
Plutarch records that the people of the wider Argos area would throw a lamb into Lerna while calling to Dionysus to come out of the water. The cult was part of a wider symbolism and connection between lakes and Dionysus, who held the epithet
Limnaios ("he of the lake"). The catabasis into the lake symbolises death-and-rebirth deities, the hero who enters the Underworld and then re-emerges as a god. In a similar Argive tradition, during Dionysus' war against the Argives for rejecting his worship, King
Perseus flung Dionysus into Lerna. The lake represents the link between the world of the living and that of the dead, and it is the god himself who drowns in the lake. The fig, which is widespread all over the Mediterranean, is present in various cults and myths, including the mythology of Demeter as well as Dionysus, two deities connected to the vegetation and the Underworld. It being used to form the phallus is justified in its status as fertility symbol. Furthermore, the mysteries of Lerna worshipped Demeter under the epithet
Prosymna, which evokes Dionysus' guide; 'Polymnus' translates to 'he with many hymns' and is an adequate name for cult purposes, though it could also be a misspelling judging from Demeter's title. == See also ==