September
14th, Exaltation of the Holy Cross
We
adore your Cross, O Lord, and we praise and glorify your holy resurrection:
Behold by the wood joy has come into the whole world.
(Antiphon from Morning Prayer)
The Catholic Faithful pay a special honor and veneration to
the Holy Cross of our Lord. Indeed, we even speak to the Cross as though to
Christ Jesus himself as we sing, Ave
Crux, Spes unica! “Hail O Cross, our only Hope!”
The True Cross of our Lord, whose feast we celebrate this
Sunday, is given such honor, love, and adoration by the Church on account of
the marvelous union it shared with our Savior. Let us consider how the Cross
was united to the Lord by comparing this union to the Hypostatic Union of
Humanity and Divinity in Christ.
The
Union of Man and God in Christ Jesus
Our Savior testifies that worship belongs to God alone: It is written, The Lord thy God shalt thou adore,
and him only shalt thou serve. (Matthew 4:10)
And yet, while we worship God alone, it is clear that we
likewise worship the Humanity of our Savior Jesus Christ. Furthermore, the
worship we give to the Sacred Humanity of our Savior (as also present in the
Holy Eucharist) must not be distinguished from the adoration we give to the
Blessed Trinity. We must not say that there are two “adorations” given to
Jesus, one in respect of his divinity and another of his humanity – but there
is one only person whom we adore both in his divinity and in his humanity.
This was clearly defined at the Second Council of
Constantinople: “If anyone say that Christ is adored in two natures, so as to
introduce two distinct adorations, and does not adore God the Word made flesh
with the one and the same adoration as his flesh, as the Church has handed down
from the beginning; let such a one be anathema.”
Hence, we worship the divinity of Christ and also “his flesh”
with the same single adoration, which is likewise given to the Father and the
Holy Spirit. Yet, we may ask, How is this reconciled with the words of our
Lord, The Lord thy God shalt thou adore,
and him only shalt thou serve?
We know that none is to be worshiped save God alone, and yet
we hold that the humanity of Christ is so intimately united to the divinity as
to be worshiped with one and the same act of adoration as is the divinity.
Precisely because the humanity of Jesus is hypostatically
united to the divinity – that is to say, the humanity and divinity are united
in a single Divine Person who is God the Son – this sacred humanity is
worshiped in one and the same act with the divinity.
For
more on this, see Summa
Theologica III, q.25 [here].
The
Humanity of Christ as the Instrument of Salvation
Now, the humanity of Christ is united to the divinity as the
instrument of our salvation – for it is through the incarnation that we are
saved, and it is in his most sacred flesh that we find the fullness of all
grace which is poured out upon humanity.
Hence, we say that it is truly God who saves us, and yet we
likewise affirm that by his wounds you
were healed. Salvation does indeed come from the Lord, but through the humanity
of our Savior.
And, thus, the humanity of our Lord is so intimately united
to the divinity in the work of redemption as to be properly called the “instrument
of our salvation” – not after the manner of a separated instrument which is
taken up for a moment and then cast aside, but rather as an instrument united
to the author of all life.
The
Cross of Christ as the Instrument of Salvation
The Cross is likewise to be call the instrument of our
salvation – For by your holy Cross, you
have redeemed the world. It is through the Cross that we come to the waters
of life, and there is no salvation outside that won by Christ through his holy
Cross.
Here we do well to ask: Is the Cross a united or separated
instrument of salvation? Is the Cross a tool taken up only for a moment and
then cast aside, or rather is it not an instrument so closely united to our
Savior as to symbolize his very person?
On the feast of the Exultation of the Cross, we recognize
that the Cross was no mere tool used and then discarded, but rather is an instrument
of salvation united to the humanity of Jesus in the work of our redemption.
This is why the Cross continues to bring health and salvation to the world –
this is why the Cross of our Savior will appear in the heavens on the day of
Judgment.
After the offering of the perfect Sacrifice on Calvary, we
may well state that Christ and his Cross are inseparable. Consider the following passages from Sacred Scripture:
For
Christ sent me not to baptize; but to preach the gospel: not in wisdom of
speech, lest the cross of Christ should be made void. (1
Corinthians 1:17)
With
Christ, I am nailed to the cross. (Galatians 2:19)
For
many walk … enemies of the cross of Christ. (Philippians 3:18)
But
God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ; by
whom the world is crucified to me, and I to the world.
(Galations 6:14)
The Catholic Encyclopedia rightly states: “It seems clear,
therefore, that for St. Paul the Cross of Christ was not only a precious
remembrance of Christ’s sufferings and death, but also a symbol closely
associated with his sacrifice and the mystery of his Passion.” (from, “The True
Cross”)
The
Union of the Cross with the Humanity of Christ
We now turn to the considerations of the Angelic Thomas, as
he discusses the union of the Cross with Christ.
St. Thomas states that the Cross is united to Christ in two respects: Both as being the primary symbol of Jesus, and also as having been chosen from all wood to bear the Body of our Savior. Regarding the later, the Angel of the Schools writes that the Cross was united to Christ, “from its contact with the limbs of Christ, and from its being saturated with his blood.” (ST III, q.25, a.4)
This leads the Common Doctor to declare: “Although Christ’s
cross was not united to the Word of God in Person, yet it was united to him in
some other way, viz. by representation and contact.” (ad 2)
Hence, we may go so far as to state that, even as one must
not divide the humanity of Christ from his divinity, neither is it possible
(after the redemption) to divide the Cross of our Savior from his Divine
Person.
O
glorious Cross, your arms upheld the priceless ransom of captive humanity.
Through you the world has been saved by the blood of the Lord.
Hail, O
Cross, consecrated by the body of Christ; his members have made your wood more
noble than precious pearls. Through you the world has been saved by the blood
of the Lord. (Second Responsory
from Office of Readings)
That's why i always cringe when some uneducated fools spew nonsense like: "Oh, western spirituality is stuck in the Good Friday...you must emphasize the joy of the Resurrection and let go of that Cross...because by mentioning Christ and Cross together it seems like Cross has won over Christ...".
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