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Crucem tuam adoramus, Domine! |
September
14th, Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross
We
worship your cross, O Lord, and we praise and glorify your holy resurrection,
for the wood of the cross has brought joy to the world.
(Antiphon from Morning Prayer)
The True Cross of our Savior
Jesus Christ is the greatest and most precious of all relics. It is only to the
True Cross, from among all other relics, that the Christian faithful are
instructed to genuflect. Every other image and relic (whether of our Lord or of
any of the saints) is venerated by a bow, but the relic of the True Cross is
adored and worshiped with a genuflection!
The theologians debate as to
whether we truly worship and adore the Cross with the adoration of latria – the Thomists, following the
best of both reason and faith, maintain that we do in fact worship the Cross
with latria; but others (tending
toward a literalist reading of certain texts from the early Church) hold that
we do not worship the Cross but only give it veneration.
The Church herself speaks quite
boldly when she declares in the Sacred Liturgy that the Cross of Christ is our
only hope (O Crux, ave, Spes unica!) and
directs us to worship the Cross (Ecce
lignum Crucis … Venite, adoremus). Finally, in the Benedictus antiphon for today’s feast in the Novus Ordo breviary, the Church proclaims: “We worship your cross,
O Lord” (Crucem tuam adoramus, Domine).
Why, then, is the True Cross
venerated and even worshiped as the greatest of all relics?