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 Good Friday - Behold the Wood of the Cross

اذهب الى الأسفل 
كاتب الموضوعرسالة
Alaa Ibrahim
مشرف
مشرف
Alaa Ibrahim


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الدولة : كندا
الجنس : ذكر
عدد المساهمات : 2225
تاريخ التسجيل : 01/03/2010
الابراج : الجوزاء

Good Friday - Behold the Wood of the Cross Empty
مُساهمةموضوع: رد: Good Friday - Behold the Wood of the Cross   Good Friday - Behold the Wood of the Cross Icon_minitime1السبت 30 مارس 2013 - 17:08

Good Friday - Behold the Wood of
the Cross


Crosses come in all sizes, shapes and material. Some are
jeweled, others are intricately carved. Good Friday brings us back to the
reality that it is about a wooden cross and, more importantly, about the One who
died upon it.


Good Friday - Behold the Wood of the Cross Mar29_23

WASHINGTON (Catholic Online): When
Catholics and Protestants have opportunities to talk about their Christian
faith, at some point the topic will turn to the crucifix versus the cross. The
Protestant argument usually ends (or sometimes begins) with the words - "but
don't you know that Christ was raised from the dead?"

Apart from the fact
that, yes. we know that. we believe that with all of hearts. That particular
question does not really address the real issue.

In a few such
conversations I confess that I have defaulted to an equally inane response.
"Well, if you really want to celebrate the fact that Jesus rose from the dead,
why don't you wear an empty tomb around your neck?"

By the way, a few
years ago I did a web search and found a company called Empty Tomb Jewelry. Case
closed!

Seriously though, the issue of the cross and the crucifix is one
that points to an important point. The cross has absolutely no significant apart
from the One who hung upon it the first Good Friday. Countess lives were lost on
the cross over a large span of time. It was the "torture of choice" for the
Romans and yet those deaths did not give rise to any embrace of this image.


In his meditations for the Way of the Cross, which he wrote while still
a cardinal in 1976, Blessed John Paul II says, "'They have pierced my hands and
feet, I can count all my bones.' (Ps 22:16-17).

"'I can count...' How
prophetic were these words! And yet we know that this body is a ransom. The
whole of this body, its hands, its feet, its every bone, is a priceless ransom.
The Whole Man is in a state of utmost tension: his bones, his muscles, his
nerves, his every organ and every cell, is stretched and strained to
breaking-point. 'I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to
myself.' (Jn 12:32)

"These words express the full reality of the
crucifixion. And part of this reality is the terrible tension penetrating
Christ's hands, feet and every bone: driving its way into the entire body
which, nailed like a mere thing to the beams of the Cross, is about to be
utterly annihilated in the convulsive agony of death.

"And the whole of
the world, which Jesus wills to draw to himself, enters into the reality of the
Cross. The world is dependent on the gravitational pull of this body, which
inertia now causes to sink lower and lower."

On Good Friday we venerate
this cross - a word that means honor, esteem, adoration, or regard very highly.
Yet, the liturgy betrays the reason. "Behold the wood of the Cross on which hung
the salvation of the world."

The cross alone is a wonderful Christian
symbol, but leaves no challenge to the beholder. Crosses are worn by people of
all walks of life and all conditions of life. It has become an item of adornment
as well as a Christian symbol. The scandal begins when Salvation is hung upon
it.

The crucifix calls people to a decision. a decision about the Lord
Jesus Christ, who hung upon the Cross, becoming the salvation of the world.
People must choose what to do about Him, whether to accept His death and, with
it, the fullness of all that He revealed, or to reject Him.

A nineteenth
century Baptist evangelist, D.L. Moody, captured the heart of this confrontation
in a sermon entitled "What Think Ye of Christ?" He guided his hearers through a
serious of interviews, including those who were present for His passion and
death. To each one - the Pharisees, Caiaphas, Pilate, Judas, the Centurion at
the cross, the Apostles - he asked the key question, "What think ye of Christ?"
Each one answered in kind.

The crucifix continues to call us, Catholic,
Protestant, and all the sorts and conditions of humanity, to respond. Our
response should not just be based on what is found in our liturgies, but more
importantly what is found in our hearts. It is there, in the very core of our
being that the question must be settled.

When speaking to 7,000 young
Catholics in the Archdiocese of Madrid two years before World Day in 2011, the
Holy Father declared, "Christ defeated sin and death by the total giving of
Himself. For this reason, we must embrace and adore the Lord's cross, make it
our own, accept its weight as Simon of Cyrene did, in order to participate in
the only thing that can redeem all of humanity."

On the Good Friday
before his death, Blessed John Paul II was too weak to attend the liturgy He
sent the faithful a person message, which, in part, said, "The adoration of the
Cross directs us to a commitment that we cannot shirk: the mission that St Paul
expressed in these words: 'In my flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ's
afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the Church' (Col 1:24).


"I also offer my sufferings so that God's plan may be completed and his
Word spread among the peoples. I, in turn, am close to all who are tried by
suffering at this time. I pray for each one of them.

"On this memorable
day of Christ's crucifixion, I look at the Cross with you in adoration,
repeating the words of the liturgy: 'O crux, ave spes unica!' Hail, O Cross, our
only hope, give us patience and courage and obtain peace for the
world!"

What do we think of Christ? What place does He really occupy in
our lives? How profoundly does His passion, death, resurrection, and revelation
impact me?

During Lent the Church visits the Christ's Passion and Death
through the Stations of the Cross. Each each station the minister says, "We
adore you, O Christ, and we bless you." To which we respond, "Because by your
holy cross you have redeemed the world."

This is why we don't wear an
empty tomb around our necks. Resurrection without a Redeemer is merely a
restoration of life. When the cross is added, it is for the life of the
world!
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Good Friday - Behold the Wood of the Cross
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