Yesterday and today, we honor and give glory to God for the Cross—this precious instrument of our salvation. We hear in the hymns of this feast day:
“The Cross is the guardian of the whole world. The Cross is the beauty of the Church. The Cross is the might of kings. The Cross is the confirmation of the faithful. The cross is the glory of the angels…and the wounding of demons.”
The Cross is everything for us! We bring it out to the center of the Church. We decorate it with beautiful and fragrant flowers. We bow down low before its life-giving wood. In all of these external movements, we give Glory to God for the Cross. But have we been able to exalt the Cross in our own lives? Has the Cross’s meaning penetrated the very fabric of our being?
This feast day is one that is unknown to many in the modern Christian world because you will not find it anywhere in Holy Scripture. It is found rather through Holy Tradition—in the history books and in the hymnography of the Ancient Church.
When our Lord was taken down from the Cross, the instrument of His death remained on Golgotha for some time before it was eventually thrown down into the trash heap near the spot of the crucifixion. A few decades later, after the city of Jerusalem was destroyed, Emperor Hadrian gave orders to build a temple over the land where the cross was buried. The temple was to be built to the Roman Goddess Venus who was the Goddess of fornication, lust, and desire.
So imagine if you will, for several hundred years, on the very spot that the True God gave His life for the human race, He had to watch from above as His own creation offered sacrifices to the Goddess of the Passions just a few meters above the Cross of Christ.
When we come into an Orthodox Church, we see the cross of Christ depicted literally everywhere. It is on the Altar table, on the top of the Royal doors, even on the fabric of the icon stands. Many of our Churches are even designed to be constructed in the shape of the cross, leaving the faithful to worship in the very center of it. The Cross is everywhere. It is raised. It is prominent. It is exalted.
Can we claim the same thing with our own spiritual crosses? How much is the cross exalted within us? Does our Lord’s love take precedent in our own lives, above everything else in this world? Or is it sometimes buried, neglected, and “thrown into the trash heap” as we occupy ourselves with earthly concerns?
After Emperor Constantine issued the Edict of Milan, which stopped the persecution of Christians throughout the empire, he sent his elderly mother St. Helen to Jerusalem to find the Holy Places that had been decimated and buried by the pagans. After years of searching, she met with an elderly Hebrew man named Jude who told her that Golgotha was buried beneath the temple of Venus.
St. Helen had the temple demolished and the land excavated. It was there that they found three crosses, a board with the inscription “King of the Jews”, and four nails that were used to put our Lord to death. In order to determine which of the crosses was that of Christ’s, the Patriarch of Jerusalem ordered that a corpse be brought to the site. They laid a dead man on the three crosses and when he was laid on the cross of our Lord, his eyes opened as he came to life.
The entire Christian world celebrated and rejoiced at the finding of the true cross! It was lifted up and exalted on high. One year later, Emperor Constantine ordered that the area surrounding Golgotha and the Empty Tomb be enclosed in a massive Church that was finished nine years after the finding of the Cross. The Church of the Holy Sepulcher (although it has been rebuilt several times throughout history) still stands today over those sacred sites, welcoming Christian pilgrims from around the world.
Brothers and Sisters in Christ, the history of the Cross reminds us of the one thing that is needed in order to dig through the trash heap of our passions and to dig out the spiritual cross that is within us—effort. Being a half a world removed from the Holy Places that St. Constantine and Helen preserved for us, we do not have the benefit of walking into the Holy Sepulcher and physically experiencing the energy that radiates from the tomb of Christ. Rather, we gain true knowledge of the power of the Cross by doing what our Lord tells us today in the Gospel: Denying ourselves of our own selfish wants and desires, taking up our hardships, sufferings, and doubts, and following after Him.
By the power of the precious and life-giving Cross, O Lord, have mercy on us and save us!