Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Holy Land rife with Christian symbol of one and many meanings

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Holy Land rife with Christian symbol of one and many meanings

    Worldwide Faith News

    [PCUSANEWS] No Subject

    >From PCUSA NEWS <[email protected]>

    Date Wed, 30 Mar 2005 16:02:24 -0600

    Note #8683 from PCUSA NEWS to PRESBYNEWS:

    05165
    March 29, 2005

    Cross fertilization

    Holy Land rife with Christian symbol of one and many meanings

    by Alexa Smith

    EAST JERUSALEM - In a mosaic-filled chapel in the corner of Holy Sepulchre
    Church, Deacon Artur Harutyunyan is drawing an Armenian cross on a scrap of
    paper.

    Frustrated by his English, or rather, his lack of it, he draws
    instead.

    The cross is straight, its three edges upturned, like an inverted crown.
    Sprouting from those curves are flowers, blooming wildly.

    He looks up earnestly and says: "Yes, like lilies. Or flowers. Maybe
    grapes on a vine. It is a symbol of life, yes? Sorry I don't speak very well
    English."

    He has a slight hint of a beard and big eyes. At first glance, he
    looks like a priest in his black, cassock-like robe.

    But Harutyunyan is a deacon in the Armenian Orthodox Church and he
    serves here, singing the liturgy and giving impromptu lessons on the
    symbolism of the cross.

    That isn't as simple as it sounds: Transforming an instrument of
    torture into a symbol of life takes some doing, not to mention centuries of
    theological wrangling.

    Which is why Deacon Artur is so persistent, aided now by a young Pole
    named Martin who has wandered into the chapel and overheard some of the
    discussion.

    "You can find in Armenian crosses the tree of life," Martin says.

    "I did not know that," says Martin's wife, Margaret, peering over
    Artur's shoulder at a symbol of infinity he is drawing at the bottom of his
    sketch. He points out that the cross stands in the midst of eternity.

    "And on Armenian crosses, there is no Jesus because Jesus has risen,"
    he tells Martin, who duly translates.

    The two Christian quarters of Jerusalem's Old City are full of
    crosses ¾ so many, in fact, that they all but disappear.

    Rudimentary crosses are carved into the buttresses of ancient
    churches, like St. James Armenian Church. More elaborate designs are
    sculpted
    in seemingly random stones facing the courtyard.

    In the vast corridors of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, there are
    only a few few ornamental crosses but one is large and dramatic, planted
    firmly on the rock that tradition holds is Golgotha.

    There are other, simpler crosses, etched in the pavement on the
    rooftop chapel where the Copts worship. Others ¾ with the Greek letter X,
    the
    first letter of Christ's name, cut into the center are chiseled into the
    cement doorways of the Orthodox chapel at Calvary. Those crosses are
    remnants
    of the holy fire that the Greek patriarch carries from Christ's tomb on
    Orthodox Easter, this year May 1.

    Still more crosses are painted above doorways. Another serves as a
    hand-hold for pilgrims stumbling up a dimly lit stairway to a rooftop
    chapel.

    Another is wound in steel above an entrance to a monastery off of the
    cathedral's square central plaza.

    They are so basic to Christian tradition, they almost go unseen. But
    they are laden with centuries of symbolism culled by the world's most
    ancient
    churches. All testify to life overwhelmed by death and violence, suffering
    and pain.

    The Jerusalem Cross is one of the most popular items in Christian
    gift shops here. The design is built around a large, central cross with four
    other crosses tucked into the joints where the two beams meet.

    Ask a sales clerk what the cross symbolizes and you get a different
    answer at every store. One says the four smaller crosses stand for the four
    Gospels: Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Another says the five crosses
    represents the five kings of Europe who launched the Crusades against Islam
    in the Middle Ages and murdered their way through Jerusalem. In these
    England
    is represented by the dominant cross, with France, Spain, Germany and Italy
    getting smaller-scale recognition.

    An italicized sign in a Christian gift shop in the Old City says the
    crosses represent the five wounds of Christ. Some say the Jerusalem cross
    symbolizes Calvary: One big cross and two smaller ones on each side.

    A dozen sellers will tell you their interpretations, nod
    appreciatively at alternative stories and say that the cross means all of
    the
    above.

    But Father Eugenio Alliata, a Roman Catholic archeologist at
    Flagellation Monastery on the Via Dolorosa, shakes his head. He says a
    fellow
    monk studied this in depth, and the original meaning - according to
    fourth-century scholar Cyril of Jerusalem - is far more cosmic.

    Jerusalem, represented by the stabilizing center cross, is the center of the
    world. And it embraces the Earth with its arms - north, south, east and
    west.
    It is depicted in a fourth-century mosaic in Nazareth. By the fifth century
    A.D., it is almost commonplace.

    "It is symbolic, not realistic," Alliata says.

    Symbol, he says, is a potent force that early Christians understood.
    "Crosses took many shapes from the beginning ... and, in the beginning,
    there
    was no Christ on the cross," he says.

    Early Christians preferred representations of the cross to
    naturalistic depictions of the crucifixion.

    Rather, it was a boat with a mast, like a cross but not a cross. Or a
    male figure standing with his arms stretched out to his sides. Or a letter
    of
    the ancient Hebrew alphabet, x, or the Greek symbol, T.

    "When we represent the cross. we don't represent a historical (event)
    ... but the meaning," Alliata says in a rich Italian accent.

    Eastern Christians, he says, have always been more at ease with
    symbol, while Westerners lean toward realistic representations - embodied
    best in the contemporary Catholic crucifix, which appeared for the first
    time
    on the door of St. Sabina's Church in fifth-century Rome.

    "Early Christians did not represent Jesus in this way: A dead man on
    a cross," the priest says. "(Maybe) it was too hard to understand the
    meaning. ... It says this is real history, not mythology. This is something
    that happened, really."

    But the meaning of the Catholic cross cannot be graped by seeing only
    the moment of death, Alliata says. The faithful must remember the entire
    story of Jesus. "The meaning," he says, "is positive. In the suffering of
    this man we see the salvation given by God to all humanity."

    Twenty-eight-year-old Deacon Calistos is standing inside the Holy
    Sepulchre's chapel at Golgotha, helping pilgrims light candles to illuminate
    petitions made literally at the foot of the cross.

    He is eager to talk about the ornate Greek Orthodox cross, with icons
    where the beams cross - usually images of Jesus' mother Mary and St. John,
    his beloved. And the sculpted top of the cross, which depicts God the
    Father.
    At the foot, typically, is a skull and crossbones, symbolizing death.

    It is all about life, the journey of faith.

    "The cross," Calistos says, "is like the soul of each person.
    Vertically, it shows how the spirit goes to God, how our heart is dedicated
    to Him. And horizontally, it shows love for others. Jesus opened his hands
    on
    the cross to take in the world.

    "It really is the two commandments: Love God with all your heart and
    soul and mind. And love your fellow human as yourself."

    For Calistos, who says he no longer has a surname, the symbolism in
    the cross is rich and deep and rewards study with insight.

    The skull at its base is gruesome, of course. But the blood of Jesus
    on the cross washes it away, cleansing even the first sin. Scanning it from
    bottom to top illustrates how the human spirit passes from death to life. As
    Deacon Calistos says: "All the way up. ... If you look at this cross ... it
    says everything. The passion. The resurrection. All of his life comes to
    your
    mind."

    The suffering it shows, Calistos says, helps Christians find the
    strength to carry on, to carry their own crosses because the life of mercy
    and love thay have chosen guarantees pain in a harsh world.

    And the icons help people pray, he says.

    "When you look at a picture of your mother, your father, someone
    close to you - but they are far away - it helps you feel something
    different,
    even if they are not so close," he says, and it is much the same with Mary,
    St. John, Jesus. Or God.

    The cross is a symbol that Orthodox integrate into worship. When
    Greek Orthodox children are baptized, they are dunked three times into the
    Baptismal font. The sign of the cross is then made all over their tiny
    bodies, the hands, the belly, the toes, the chin, the forehead, sealing the
    Baptism.

    Congregants cross themselves in worship, beginning at the head,
    saying, "God is powerful." Then the belly, saying, "God is immortal." And
    the
    right shoulder: "God is merciful," remembering the thief on the cross who
    asked to join Jesus in Paradise.

    A Kyrie Eleison (God have mercy) is said as the penitent touches the left
    shoulder, remembering the unsaved sinner at the cross.

    "The cross," Calistos says, "is a symbol of victory against death,
    against evil.

    When you study the cross, it represents life."

    To subscribe or unsubscribe, please send an email to
    [email protected] or
    [email protected]

    To contact the owner of the list, please send an email to
    [email protected]
Working...
X