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CyrilSebastian
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A local Christian inquired: Why is the body of Christ still on the Cross which hangs in the sanctuary of a Roman Catholic church?
I never understood this objection, even as a Protestant. Under no other work of art that portrays a past event do we claim that the depiction implies that the event is still occurring. Yet protestants insist that a sculpture of christ on the cross means that we believe christ is still on the cross… even though we obviously believe that He’s both resurrected and in a glorified body.A local Christian inquired: Why is the body of Christ still on the Cross which hangs in the sanctuary of a Roman Catholic church?
I assume this is Protestant who may object to Christ still being on the cross. If so I would say that it wasn’t the cross that saved us but Christ’s willing sacrifice on the cross. The crucifix is a fuller symbol of Christ’s sacrifice.A local Christian inquired: Why is the body of Christ still on the Cross which hangs in the sanctuary of a Roman Catholic church?
I can understand the thinking behind the first part of this post, but it’s pertinent to remember that Christ’s sacrifice was for all of our sins for all time. His willing and innocent sacrifice was more than sufficient in God’s eyes to outweigh any possible offense we can ever commit. Not just individually, but even as a species.I think other faiths use the plain cross to have the symbol of the crucifixion and what it means to everyone…but at the same time, they feel that he suffered quite enough that day and should not have to still be up there 2000 years later.
Would a Christian forget he was crucified just because they don’t see it in front of them? I don’t think so. It’s one of the most important moments in the story of Christianity!
I tend to agree with having a plain cross. I feel like…he deserves some peace, now.
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Because it is extremely important we have to keep Jesus on the Cross. Read the words of St. Paul just how important this is to our faith.I think other faiths use the plain cross to have the symbol of the crucifixion and what it means to everyone…but at the same time, they feel that he suffered quite enough that day and should not have to still be up there 2000 years later.
Would a Christian forget he was crucified just because they don’t see it in front of them? I don’t think so. It’s one of the most important moments in the story of Christianity!
I tend to agree with having a plain cross. I feel like…he deserves some peace, now.
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It is the unbroken tradition of both the East and West Churches. The East with their beautiful Icons and the Western with their Statues. They both depict the same. Jesus on the Cross TEACHES us.I Corinthians Chapter 1 Verse 23
21 For the world did not know God through wisdom, and so, in the wisdom of God, it pleased God to accomplish the salvation of believers, through the foolishness of our preaching. 22 For the Jews ask for signs, and the Greeks seek wisdom. 23 But we are preaching Christ crucified. Certainly, to the Jews, this is a scandal, and to the Gentiles, this is foolishness. 24 But to those who have been called, Jews as well as Greeks, the Christ is the virtue of God and the wisdom of God. 25 For what is foolishness to God is considered wise by men, and that which is weakness to God is considered strong by men.
Do Protestants who display an empty cross in their church believe that the cross of Jesus is still standing empty on Golgotha?I never understood this objection, even as a Protestant. Under no other work of art that portrays a past event do we claim that the depiction implies that the event is still occurring. Yet protestants insist that a sculpture of christ on the cross means that we believe christ is still on the cross… even though we obviously believe that He’s both resurrected and in a glorified body.
Very strange.
Why aren’t these protestants logically consistent? Do paintings of the civil war imply that the civil war is still occurring? Does the film Passion of the Christ imply that all the events in the movie are occurring right now? Does the Abraham Lincoln memorial in DC mean that Lincoln is still alive, sitting on his seat of power, ruling the USA?
I mean, we don’t apply this logic to any other work of art, anywhere. It seems to be very very strange logic to me.
Not I. I am wearing a replica of the Holy Father’s Good Shephard cross.This is why we wear crucifixes. I think we all agree that His suffering and death gave us hope and trust in salvation. I don’t understand why other faiths prefer to use an empty cross. No ill will intended.
From the Bible Christian Society:A local Christian inquired: Why is the body of Christ still on the Cross which hangs in the sanctuary of a Roman Catholic church?
Excellent.From the Bible Christian Society:
I had a friend ask me why Catholics have Crucifixes in our churches…don’t we believe Jesus has risen? Why do we keep Him on the cross?
biblechristiansociety.com/apologetics/two_minute#5
First of all, you would want to check out 1st Corinthians, chapter 1, verse 23. Paul says, “…but we preach Christ crucified…” Why does Paul preach Christ crucified? Doesn’t he know Jesus has been raised from the dead? Of course he does! But, he knows that it is through the power of the crucified Christ on the cross that the bonds of sin and death are broken. As Paul says in verse 24, Christ crucified is the “power of God”.
1 Cor 2:2, “For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and Him crucified.” Again, didn’t Paul know that Jesus had risen from the dead? Of course, he did.
Paul preaches Christ crucified because an empty cross has no power. The cross that bears the beaten, battered, and bloodied body of Jesus Christ, however, that cross is the “power of God”. This is why, we “keep Jesus on the cross,” because we, too, preach Christ crucified. The Crucifix reminds us not only of God’s power, but also His love for us - giving His only begotten Son up for suffering and death.
Also, here in this life we do not share so much in the glory of the Resurrection, as we do in the suffering of Jesus on the cross; after all, we must take up our cross daily if we are to follow Jesus, as it says in Lk 9:23.
And, we must die with Christ in order to live with Him as Romans 6:8 tells us. Where did Christ die? On the cross. The Crucifix serves to remind us of these things.
One other passage to keep in mind is Galatians 3:1, “O foolish Galatians! Who has bewitched you, before whose eyes Jesus Christ was publicly portrayed as crucified?” Did you catch that? Jesus was publicly portrayed, before their “eyes”, as being crucified. Sounds kind of like they may have been looking at a Crucifix, doesn’t it?
You should thank the author of the article, John Martinogni, an apologist on EWTN.Pablope, Thank you for the beautiful explanation, I agree wholeheartedly!
For me personally, the Crucifix has a profound meaning, it is my personal connection to Jesus Christ. When I step into the Church, or see a Crucifix anywhere, I cannot help being reminded of just how much I’m loved and the price that was paid for me to know that.
Any sin I may have committed, no matter how small or perhaps not something I did but something I did not do or say takes on a truer depth of the gravity and seriousness of the offense when I contemplate Christ on the Cross and his suffering for me. For us.
In fact, at the very beginning of my conversion to Catholicism, reading, seeing images of the stations of the cross, contemplating the sufferings of Jesus, enabled me for the first time to have an almost indescribable very profound realization of the true depth of all my sins,a depth of understanding I’d never experienced before seriously considering His sufferings and enabled me to ask for forgiveness with true sorrow. I KNOW I was forgiven absolutely, I actually had what some protestants may call a ‘born again’ experience.
Thank God the priest had given me a book on Christ and some pamphlets!
The very first time I walked into a Catholic Church, I felt the very presence of God. And I still do each and every time I enter our Church. I thank God for RCIA and the wonderful people connected to it.
His suffering on the Cross and the presence of the Crucifix, the forgiveness and love that are possible through Christ is what brought me to my Christian Home. I’m so grateful for the Crucifix.