“Hail, o living Cross - door of Paradise, support
of the faithful, protective wall of the Church", chants the hymn
author on the Sunday of the Adoration of the Cross at mid-Lent.
The Cross is also called “life-bearing” by the Church, because
thanks to the “fruit of the Cross” – that is, by tasting the
“tree of life” which is Christ, we the descendants of the
first-fashioned couple, have savoured - not the bitter taste of
death, but the sweet delight of life.
Therefore, with the ascent of the Lord upon it,
the Cross has acquired a renewed meaning, becoming from a symbol
of death to a symbol of life… from a symbol of ultimate
humiliation and degradation, to a symbol of rectification and
honor, from an instrument of death for sinners,
ôï an instrument of salvation for repentants, and finally a symbol of
redemption and resurrection!
But it appears that we humans have not perceived
the Crucifix as a redemptive and saving symbol, which is why we
stubbornly refuse to lift it. We prefer, therefore, to be
weighed down by the weight of our sins, rather than strive to
cast them off. We prefer to remain enslaved to our passions,
selfishness, ambition, hedonism and the like, rather than
struggle to shake them off. We prefer to fall ill by our sins,
both mental and physical, rather than confess them and be
finally cured of them. Also, in order to be freed from our
sufferings, we prefer to trust terrestrial 'saviours' who even
demand that we sacrifice all our goods and freedoms, rather than
trust our heavenly Saviour, Who conceded to be sacrificed for
our sake.
And when He does ask us to follow Him, He does
not extort our will, because He created us free-willed and
self-governing. He asks us to follow Him, but not in order to
increase His followers, because quite simply, His authority is
not “of this world” of corruption and sin. Nor does he want us
to follow Him so that he may dominate us like earthly rulers do,
because He “did not come to be ministered to, but to minister.”
Christ is vastly different to all other would-be
saviours. They, promising our salvation from the evils of this
world and in order to tempt us, at first generously scatter
handfuls of riches, glories and pleasures, and as soon as they
entrap us in their nets, they seize whatever they gave us, also
depriving us of our much-desired freedom. In order to continue
conceding those things to us, they demand ever greater and more
difficult sacrifices. And when they achieve their goal in full
and they no longer need us, then they throw us away too,
according to the popular saying: 'the devil doesn't even love
his own children'.
However, by sacrificing Himself first for us, our
Christ shows us the path and the means, so that we too can earn
our salvation, with His Grace! There are three steps to
salvation, based on the Gospel of the day (Mark, 8:34 - 9:1):
self-denial, lifting the cross, and walking with Him. Whoever
renounces his evil self, automatically takes up his cross, that
is, he is called to discard his own will and to clothe himself
with the armor of virtues, as our saints did, in order to become
a companion of Christ. After all, this is how our God-bearing
Fathers interpret the above passage (Mark, 8:34).Of course our
Christ knows that especially the first step - the denial of our
evil self - is the most difficult step, because of our natural
tendency towards mortal sin. That is precisely why He is
available to extend a helping hand to us, to be our Cyrene and
help us bear our cross, as long as we just consent to accept His
help. But in order to do this, we need to believe that He is
”the way, the truth and the life” (John, 14:6).
If we believe that Christ is the truth, then we
are called to follow His exhortation to strive, that is, to
enter “through the narrow gate”, and to also be suspicious that
“wide is the gate and broad is the way that leads to perdition”,
which is why “many are they who enter through it”.
On the contrary, we should be ready and
determined that “narrow is the gate and sorrowful is the way
that leads to life”, which is why “few are they who find it”
(Matt., 7:13-14, Luke, 13:23-24).
Christ therefore not only did not lie to us about
the way of the Cross and that salvation is difficult and uphill;
He also offered us the criteria to distinguish genuine saviours
from the false prophets of salvation. He warned us, in fact,
that the latter are recognized ”by their (rotten) fruits”
(Matth., 7:20).
Let us then keep our eyes open, lest we be
deceived by all kinds of promises of the wily one and of all the
wicked. Let’s not fool ourselves! The way of the Cross is the
only liberating and salvific way; that is why our Church chants:
“Hail, o life-bearing Cross, through which the power of death
was swallowed, and we were elevated from earth to heaven”.
Subsequently, if we too want to be elevated to
heaven, for which we had been created let us beseech our
Crucified Lord and God, Whom the Church presents before us in
the midst of Holy and Great Lent in order to empower us all to
crucify our personal passions and expel all evil-spitting sin,
in order to be made worthy of seeing the salvific Light of His
Resurrection again this year.
Lord, may it be Your wish, and “Cross of Christ,
save us by Your power!”