Exaltation of the Cross
To non-believers, to celebrate the feast of the Cross makes no sense
at all. It is sheer lunacy. To those who don’t believe, it is a symbol of death,
shame, and defeat. There is nothing glorious about the cross and the one who
hangs on it. There is only shame. Shame stripped away every earthly support
that the Lord had: His friends gave way in shaming abandonment; His reputation
gave way in shaming mockery; His decency gave way in shaming nakedness; His
comfort gave way in shaming torture. His glorious dignity gave way to the
utterly undignified, degrading reflexes of moaning and groaning.
But for us Christians, the Cross is the greatest summary of our faith.
St. Francis of Assisi used to call it his “book,” where he learned all of his
wisdom. The Cross is also the key that opens the doors of heaven. St. Rose of
Lima, the first saint of the Americas, said, “Apart from the Cross, there is no
other ladder by which we may get to heaven.” If we wish to get to eternal life
with God, we must climb up with Jesus by means of the Cross.
Yes, the Cross of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ is a sign of
contradiction to the values and principles of the world. The Cross summons us
to change the way we see things. It shows how God can bring good out of evil,
order out of chaos, meaning out of absurdity, and life out of death. It urges
us, challenges us, and demands us to look at the world in a vision and in a way
that departs from the vision we might have under a secular perspective. It
calls us to look at our relationships with others, to look at life, and to see
death in ways that are inside-out and upside-down from those who have no faith,
and those who are forced to see them through the eyes of fear. Pre-eminently,
the Cross is proof of how far it is that God our Father has gone to prove His
love for you and me. Strangely and in a seemingly contradictory way, the Cross
is a sign of Love. No! It is not merely
a sign or a symbol, it is the ultimate proof of God's love for us.
Death, under the Cross, is not an ending, it is a beginning.
Suffering, pain and loss under the Cross, are no longer things that separate us
from God, rather they unite us to Him. Tragedy under the cross is not ultimate,
it is only temporary. Sin under the cross no longer alienates us from God, it
occasions His coming to us in the midst of our sins in His merciful love. The
humiliation the Church and her ministers must endure today, would not be a sign
of her destruction, but rather of her purification.
What does it mean for the Church to walk in the path of our Lord? If
the Church truly continues the ministry of Christ in the world, then she must
embrace the Cross. And this ultimately leads to rejection, humiliation and even
persecution. The Third Millennium has been called by many names, but perhaps
one of the most apt descriptions of this new millennium is that it would be
called the Age of Martyrdom. For indeed, we have seen the martyrdom of more
Christians than in any of the previous centuries. The painful irony is that the
persecution of thousands and millions of Christians who have to live and
survive under the shadow of the cross are now overshadowed by the spectre of a
new global wave of clerical abuse and cover-ups. These abuse scandals are
doubly scandalous because they come at a time when the Church is entering a new
era of persecution. Although the
scandals certainly demand our attention, they also serve to draw attention away
from the plight of persecuted Christians.
Unfortunately, the story of immoral clerics and cowardly bishop is far
more juicy than the plight and sufferings of persecuted Christians who continue
to labour under the crushing weight of the cross.
It is sad to see Christians discouraged by the sins of other
Catholics, and, yet, it seems that the greatest suffering of the Church comes
from the wounds of her members. The Catechism quotes on this point a pope who
personally embraced the suffering of the Church in himself: “The Church is
therefore holy, though having sinners in her midst, because she herself has no
other life but the life of grace. If they live her life, her members are
sanctified; if they move away from her life, they fall into sins and disorders
that prevent the radiation of her sanctity. This is why she suffers and does
penance for those offenses, of which she has the power to free her children
through the blood of Christ and the gift of the Holy Spirit” (Pope Bl. Paul VI,
Credo of the People of God, § 19). If the Church is called by God to sanctify
the modern world, how else would this happen but on the Cross? The Church’s
path is the path of the Lord: Calvary.
St Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, or better known by her pre-baptismal
Jewish name ‘Edith Stein,’ once taught on the Feast of the Exaltation of the
Holy Cross: “More than ever the cross is a sign of contradiction. The followers
of the Antichrist show it far more dishonour than did the Persians who stole
it. They desecrate the images of the Cross, and they make every effort to tear
the cross out of the hearts of Christians. All too often they have succeeded
even with those who, like us, once vowed to bear Christ's cross after him.
Therefore, the Saviour today looks at us, solemnly probing us, and asks each
one of us: Will you remain faithful to the Crucified? Consider carefully! The
world is in flames, the battle between Christ and the Antichrist has broken
into the open. If you decide for Christ, it could cost you your life.”
Every time when I am beset by anxiety and troubles, every time I
feel the weight of my responsibilities, every time when I am overwhelmed by
shame and failure and tempted to give up, I look at the Cross, it gives me
courage and hope, more than anything else the world can offer. When I look at
Our Lord hanging on the Cross, my heart is filled with all that is beautiful,
even in the midst of the world’s ugliness, all that is bright, even in the
midst of the world’s darkness and I’m reminded once again, that death will not
have the last word, suffering and failure will not strike the last chord,
darkness will not mark the end of the story, sin will not hammer the last nail,
but it would be life. Love will have the last word. “For God loved the world so
much that He gave His only Son, so that everyone who believes in Him may not be
lost.” More than ever before, today’s feast invites all Catholics, scandalised
by the horrors of the clergy sexual abuse and the divisions within the Church,
to look at the Cross.
We are, indeed, in the throes of an agonising trial, a trial which
is the test of our Hope and of our Faith in the Church: the test of our Hope
and our Faith in the Cross. So let us regain our courage, and as that great
medieval spiritual work tells us: “We have begun: we may not go back, nor may
we leave off. Take courage
brethren: let us go forward
together. Jesus will be with us. For the sake of Jesus, we have taken up this
Cross; for Jesus’ sake, let us persevere in it.
He will be our Helper, Who is our Captain and our Forerunner. Behold our King marches before us, Who will
fight for us. Let us follow Him manfully, let no one fear terrors, let us be
ready to die valiantly in battle; nor let us bring disgrace upon our glory by
flying from the Cross!” (The Imitation of Christ, Book III, Chap. LVI) Then, the Cross will shine once again, not as
a symbol of our shame, but the Triumph of Christ over evil and darkness.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Terms of Use: As additional measure for security, please sign in before you leave your comments.
Please note that foul language will not be tolerated. Comments that include profanity, personal attacks, and antisocial behaviour such as "spamming" and "trolling" will be removed. Violators run the risk of being blocked permanently. You are fully responsible for the content you post. Please be responsible and stay on topic.