September 14, 2020 Exaltation of the Holy Cross

It is 312 AD.  Constantine, Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire, is about to do battle with Maxentius, Emperor of the Western Roman Empire.  Before the battle begins, Constantine sees a vision of a flaming cross and hears the words, “In this symbol you shall triumph.” 

He did triumph and became Constantine the Great. His triumph was indeed also the triumph of the Holy Cross and a change in world history—thanks to Constantine’s mother.

Helena, Constantine’s mother, was a Christian.  Constantine’s father, Constantius, had been emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire.  In his youth he had joined with Helena. They had one child, Constantine.  As Constantius’ political career developed, he divorced Helena to marry a woman more politically correct.  Helena and Constantine were quietly sent away. 

Nonetheless, when Constantius died, his son became emperor.  He had always remained close to his mother.  Constantine brought her back to court life.  In 326 he sent her on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land with unlimited access to his treasury in order to discover and recover the holy places.  According to Eusebius of Caesarea, Helena built or expanded churches at Bethlehem and on the Mount of Olives.

Jerusalem had never quite recovered from its destruction by the Roman Emperor Titus in 70 AD.  The Roman Emperor Hadrian had built a temple to Roman gods over the site of Golgotha where Jesus died.  Helena ordered it torn down to construct a church there.  As the excavation began, three crosses were discovered.  When a man who had died was touched to one of them, he came back to life.  A woman who was very ill also was healed when she touched this cross.  Helena and others therefore concluded this was the true cross.

Part of the cross was sent to Rome, part to Constantinople, and part became the basis for the Church of the Holy Sepulcure in Jerusalem.  The cross in Jerusalem was dedicated on September 13-14 in 335.  It was placed in the church on September 14.  Thus, we celebrate the feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross today.

A Watershed Moment in History and Christian Practice

The “True Cross” and this feast day have figured large in church history.  This feast in many religious communities through the centuries has been the dividing time between the summer work in the fields with its more generous portions of food and sleep and the winter schedule more dedicated to study and penance.  

The triumph of the Holy Cross in Constantine’s life set the stage for the transition of life in Europe from “Pax Romana” to Christian culture. Constantine gained a military victory that enabled Rome to stand against barbarian invaders for another hundred and fifty years.  He ended the persecution of Christians and participated in the Council of Nicea, which proclaimed Christ as True God AND True Man.  This Council gave the Church our Nicene Creed and a solid foundation with which to fight Arianism. What he began led to Christianity becoming the official religion of Rome in 380.

As Rome fell to invaders from the north in 476, the cross became a symbol of Christianity under siege.  Christians survived the Dark Ages by living a life based on the image of the cross.  They were ascetical beyond what us moderns can imagine.  Except for cloistered religious, they knew little of Christianity.  But they believed it.  Their lives centered around it.  In a time when death was all around all the time, the symbol of Christ’s victory over death became the symbol of hope through the darkness. 

The Holy Cross in Today’s Readings

I look at today’s readings.  The reading from Numbers is a short version of the story of when the Israelites grumbled  and doubted God’s care in the desert.  God told Moses to make a bronze symbol of the snakes that bit the people and raise it up.  When someone who had been bitten looked at the seraph (nice word for snake), they were healed. This event is noted today as a prefiguration of the cross and its ability to heal us if we focus our attention on it.

The Gospel is a part of Jesus’ conversation with Nicodemus, the Pharisee who questioned and “came to Jesus by night.”  In this part Jesus gives the WHY of the cross:

“For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him might not perish, but might have eternal life.  For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but hat the world might be saved through him.”

God’s nature is Love.  Love is to will the good of the other.  God loves the world (ALL of us, everybody and all that is in nature) so much that God came into our world to be part of it.  That meant God chose to be subject to the evil which is the absence of God, the absence of goodness/love.  This evil is inevitable if God gives freedom—which love does. If we as humans did not have freedom, we could not truly love.  Love must be free.  God is free to love us.  He gives us the option to love Him—and others—or not. We must choose the way of God—or not.  To the point that people do NOT choose love—they make crosses for others; they perpetuate evil in the world.

God, through Jesus, could still only be God.  He could only be who He was and is: goodness.  He did not come to condemn.  He came to save—how?  It is symbolized in the cross.  The cross represents EVERYTHING that evil could do to Jesus, who is the Christ—humiliation, injustice, suffering, abandonment, and death.  In the cross, Jesus took it upon Himself.  It temporarily killed his human nature and body. 

But Jesus IS GOD.  The cross gave God the means by which God’s goodness triumphs over evil. On the cross, GOD HIMSELF chose to die so that evil might be fully overcome.  Active evil as sin entered the world because of human disobedience, pride, and selfishness.  When God, remaining fully God, AND also becoming fully man, chose to offer himself in obedience on the cross, everything begun in Eden was changed—transformed—made new.

That instrument and symbol of torture therefore became the instrument and symbol of triumph.

We suffer.  We suffer from the evils that God died on the Holy Cross to save us from.  We die. 

Yet to me, that image of the Holy Cross outlines the way out in our current crises and the temptations of our post Christian world:  The vertical beam says to me:  Trust God and remain faithful, while living in the here and now with other Christians.  The horizontal beam says:  Reach out to those outside the Faith or who are barely within it. Reach out in Truth to tell the wondrous stories of God.  Reach out in compassion to show mercy and give healing.

Prayer:

Jesus, keep me near the cross.  Today.  Help me carry and die to self on the crosses life sends me today.  Help me hang in there, choosing, like Christ, to remain good—even if evil pummels me.  Help me live on the crosses of my life until You, Lord, tonight say “it is finished” for today.  Help me see the path of choosing good, not evil, is the path of living in Beatitude.  The path of Beatitude chooses to let go of evil when evil comes and not pass it on.  It is the path of the triumph and Exaltation of your Holy Cross.  Help me live it today, Lord.  Lead me, guide me.

About the Author

Mary Ortwein lives in Frankfort, Kentucky in the US. A convert to Catholicism in 1969, Mary had a deeper conversion in 2010. She earned a theology degree from St. Meinrad School of Theology in 2015. Now an Oblate of St. Meinrad, Mary takes as her model Anna, who met the Holy Family in the temple at the Presentation. Like Anna, Mary spends time praying, working in church settings, and enjoying the people she meets. Though formally retired, Mary continues to work part-time as a marriage and family therapist and therapy supervisor. A grandmother and widow, she divides the rest of her time between facilitating small faith-sharing groups, writing, and being with family and friends. Earlier in her life, Mary worked avidly in the pro-life movement. In recent years that has taken the form of Eucharistic ministry to Carebound and educating about end-of-life matters. Now, as Respect for Human Life returns to center stage, she seeks to find ways to communicate God's love and Lordship for all--from the moment of conception through the moment we appear before Jesus when life ends.

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13 Comments

  1. Historically informative, spiritually enlightening. Thank you, Mary and be very blessed on this day of exulting the Holy Cross.

  2. Thank you,Mary, for your wonderfully revealing and informative reflection.
    It really has a spiritual impact on me…

  3. Thank you Mary. The thoughts and words you bring us make us better cross bearing Christians. Our sincere gratitude goes out to all who bring us these Catholic moments.

  4. Hi Mary, I found your writing to be so interesting. This was the first time I read about the “Feast of the Cross”. What books or where can I read more about the history of Christianity? Thank you for your sharing of knowledge. I also look forward to your writings of everyday life.

  5. Good morning, Mary!
    Every Monday morning the first thing I say, “I can’t wait to read what Mary has written to us!” You did not disappoint! You are gifted with such patience and knowledge and then you share all of that with us. Thank you. You always give me a great deal to ponder as well as providing a clearer picture of the readings.
    May all who take time at CM to help us on a daily basis to better understand and live the Word be blessed, you are so appreciated.

  6. Good Morning! Thank you so much for your gospel reflection today. It was so beautifully written! The history lesson and your thoughts on the cross brought me to tears. H
    ow beautiful the crucifix is to us! Thank you for helping me see it that way!!

  7. Thank you for the history lesson Mary, very informative. Your reflection is a triumph.
    In the words of another well known scholar the crucifixion was an achievement.
    Love and joy………….

  8. Wow…. I will save this post. I love this post….one of those moments in my life where I read something that brings me just to the brink of understanding GOD.
    So I’ll save it and read it again and again because I’m tired of being at the brink, I want to get past the self imposed hurdle ….. thank you

  9. Thank you Mary.
    I enjoyed your reflection very much. I like the rich history behind this celebrated day.
    With love and prayers,
    Skip

  10. I can tell from your writing that you were a teacher! (I am too). Thank you for the super clear history lesson as well as the rest. You’re awesome!

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