E
Errham
Guest
So I’ve been reading up on Orthodoxy lately, and this seems to be the most commonly recurring criticism of Catholicism; namely, that Catholicism tends to view Jesus’s crucifixion as a very sober and pitiful event, willingly enduring unthinkable pain and suffering in order to atone for our sins. They then generally compare this to the Orthodox mindset, which is that of Jesus triumphant upon the cross, victorious in mankind’s battle against evil, as one hymn puts it, “trampling down death by death, and upon those in the tombs bestowing life”. If you look at an icon of the crucifixion, you’ll never, ever see Christ looking painful or pitiable; he’s always with a face of triumph and victory. It certainly got me thinking, and to be honest - they’re at least objectively correct there - I’ve always encountered Jesus’s passion as being a sorrowful affair, but never as a triumphant one. That usually gets saved for the resurrection, not the crucifixion. But, I’m still pretty new to Catholicism to begin with, which is why I’m posting this in the first place. Is it correct of us to focus on the sorrows of the crucifixion rather than on the triumph of it? Have you ever encountered this triumphant cross in Catholicism? Does it have a place in the Catholic mindset at all?
Pax,
-Errham
Pax,
-Errham