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I like the Crucifix which Pope JPII used.
I think he meant that, too, and I was honestly hoping so. There are a few on the forum who equate modern with inferior. This is an instance where it is not a bad thing to recognize the times and the powerful opportunity that the media provides.Likewise, to criticize the pastoral staff used by the last 3 pontiffs on the same ground (it’s “modern”) would be equally illogical. It depicts Christ Crucified, the essence of Catholicism. You’re quite right, “modern” or “contemporary” does not mean automatically mean bad.
I think what AJV was saying was that the pastoral staff’s use by the pontiff as REGULARLY as it has come to be is a modern or contemporary usage, not that it is a bad one.
It’s a wonderful crucifix. Pope Paul VI also used it. Some of the criticism it has received here is quite unearned.I rather liked JPII’s crosier… and like me, Pope Benedict saw it as something more than a “fashion statement”:
“He always spoke them with unbending firmness, first brandishing his crosier crowned with a Crucifix and then, when his physical energy was ebbing away, almost clinging to it until that last Good Friday, when he took part in the Way of the Cross in his private Chapel, gripping the Cross tightly in his arms. We cannot forget his last and silent testimony of love for Jesus.”
So true.I don’t think it’s beautiful at all, but I think it’s a magnificent piece of art. It points in such a profound way to the mystery of the resurrection, to this miraculous act in which death was conquered by the power of the living Christ. It’s a terribly ugly thing, but a great reminder of the salvation wrought for us.
No. While it was Pope Paul VI’s crucifix, it’s hardly less “traditional” than the one Pope Benedict now carries.Folks, it wasn’t JPII’s cross. It was the cross of Paul VI’s in the “spirit of Vatican II”. I am glad to see a return to something far more traditional.
:hypno:Yes he has thank God. The new cross is the one Pope Puis IX used. Traditionally, Popes have used crosses as staffs. Slowly, Pope Benedict is bringing in some tradition.
The Crooked Creepy Crucifix should make Catholics shudder. It’s weird and Crooked Crucifixes have generally been used by Satanists over the centuries for mocking.
Now really folks, I especially liked the one St. Peter used. It had modern lines, but old tradition. I think it was a wooden staff. Can anyone criticize that?Likewise, to criticize the pastoral staff used by the last 3 pontiffs on the same ground (it’s “modern”) would be equally illogical. It depicts Christ Crucified, the essence of Catholicism. You’re quite right, “modern” or “contemporary” does not mean automatically mean bad.
I think what AJV was saying was that the pastoral staff’s use by the pontiff as REGULARLY as it has come to be is a modern or contemporary usage, not that it is a bad one.
Perhaps you weren’t around when this cross was introduced. I was. I would hardly call it traditional. But that’s OK. “I’m OK; you’re OK, lets just focus on the Eucharist”.No. While it was Pope Paul VI’s crucifix, it’s hardly less “traditional” than the one Pope Benedict now carries.
“I’m OK; you’re OK, lets just focus on the Eucharist”.
Oh my gosh, is that UGLY!Some claim that JP2’s crucifix was based on a design by St. John of the Cross (which doesn’t neccessarily mean much), but I never liked it.
JP2’s crucifix definitely looks like a relic of 1960s/1970s “art” design. I always found it grotesque, just like this monstrosity:
img246.imageshack.us/img246/6172/popepompgs5.jpg
B16’s cross is infinitely more beautiful, although I do wish it included a corpus.
(BTW, I have nothing against bloody, realistic crucifixes, but ugly is ugly!)
That was a sarcastic comment, pointing out the modern “Catholic” mentality that some have, that’s why he put it in quotes. Not his personal opinon.
oh lol, my bad.That was a sarcastic comment, pointing out the modern “Catholic” mentality that some have, that’s why he put it in quotes. Not his personal opinon.
When you think about it, the Crucifixion of Christ was creepy and crooked, and ugly. But sometimes we don’t want to think about it. I like the “crooked” Crucifix. It reminds me more of Christ’s suffering. But everybody has their own taste.
So true!Pope John Paul II, of blessed memory, had a beautiful crucifix on his staff. It recalled the Passion of our Lord more realistically. By carrying this staff, he “preached Christ crucified” just as St. Paul did. He called all to realize that our faith is a faith built on the truth that Christ died for our sins and that to live in Christ one need die to himself just as Christ did. I am a traditional and orthodox as any traditionalist Catholic but some of the criticizims I see here are simply ridiculous some times.
“Ugly” to you perhaps. Not to others.i didn’t like it either. i know our Blessed Lord’s Passion was not pleasant, however that crucifix was plain ugly. Glad that Benedict used a more traditional one in the USA.