THE SIGN OF THE CROSS
الخميس, 25 سبتمبر,
2008
On the occasion of the Feast of the Cross according
to the Coptic calendar (September 27)
THE SIGN OF THE CROSS
Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the
Russian author who spent many years in the gulag of Siberia, bears witness to
the power of the cross. After long suffering in the work camp of Siberia, he
fell into despair. Like other prisoners, he had worked in the fields day after
day, in rain and sun, during summer and winter. His days were filled with
backbreaking labour and slow starvation. On a particular day, the hopelessness
of his situation became too much. He saw no reason to continue living, to
continue fighting the system. He thought that the rest of his life was
meaningless since he would most likely die in this Siberian prison. His life
made no difference in the world. So he gave up.
Laying his shovel on the ground, he slowly walked to a crude
work-site bench and sat down. He knew that at any moment a guard would order
him to stand up, and when he failed to respond, the guard would beat him to
death, probably with his own shovel. He had seen it happen to many other
prisoners. As he waited, head down, he felt a
presence. Slowly, he lifted his eyes and saw a skinny, old prisoner squat down
next to him. The man said nothing. Instead, he drew a stick through the ground
at Solzhenitsyn's feet, tracing the sign of the Cross. The man then got back up
and returned to his work.
As Solzhenitsyn stared at the sign of the Cross, his entire
perspective changed. He knew that he was only one man against the all-powerful
Soviet empire. Yet in that moment, he knew that there was something greater
than the evil that he saw in the prison, something greater than the Soviet
Union. He knew that the hope of all mankind was represented in that simple
Cross. And through the power of the Cross, anything was possible. Solzhenitsyn
slowly got up, picked up his shovel, and went back to work. Nothing outward had
changed, but inside, he received hope.
Whenever you see a Cross, what do you think of? In ancient
times, people would have thought about pain, suffering, and death. The Cross
was a sign of the worst torture one could suffer. It was a cursed sign. And
yet, when Jesus willingly accepted the Cross, when he willingly accepted to die
a criminal's death, when he willingly accepted to be ridiculed, hated, and
killed, he changed the Cross from a symbol of death and despair into a symbol
of life and hope. Why do we Christians place the Cross in our Church, in our
homes, in our cars? Why do we continually make the sign of the Cross, and wear
a Cross around our neck? Because for Christians, the Cross
has become a symbol of Love, Joy, Hope, Power and Victory.
First of all, the Cross reminds us of God's Love.St. John the Evangelist tells us,
"God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son that whoever
believes in him will not perish but will have eternal life." (John 3:16)
What greater love is there than to lay down your life for others?
The Cross reminds us of Joy, the joy of paradise.Many hymns of our church recall how
Adam and Eve were sent out of paradise because of a tree. They ate fruit from
the forbidden tree. And yet it is also a tree that has opened the doors of
paradise once again for all believers, the tree of the Cross.
The Cross reminds us of Hope,a hope that is greater than
the darkest despair. When Jesus was crucified, his disciples and followers all
despaired. They had abandoned Jesus. They had betrayed him. They had denied
him. They had placed all their hope in him, and now he was dead. For three days
they lived in complete despair. And yet, after the resurrection, they
understood the Cross in a new way. It was no longer a symbol of despair, but it
was now a sign of hope for all people, a hope for new life.
The Cross is a symbol of power. Often in the world, it seems that
evil conquers good and that sin is stronger than
virtue. Yet the Cross reminds us that sin will not have the last say. Evil will
not last forever.
The Cross reminds us of the resurrection.Evil and suffering
appear to win, but then comes the resurrection. In Albania, the evil
that abounds seems great, but be assured, the evil will not last. The
resurrection is coming. The 45 years of communism and atheism did not conquer
Albania. In the end, God prevailed and now we are in this church worshipping
God, while Hoxha lies in the ground. The chaos of
today will not last. God will have the last say.
Finally, the Cross is a symbol of Victory. Through the death of
Jesus on the Cross, the greatest evil, death itself, was destroyed. Before the
Cross, the devil thought that death was his greatest weapon. All who died would
enter his dark kingdom. And yet, when Jesus went to hell, the devil trembled.
The Cross, which had been a tool of evil, became a power of death for hell
itself. One of the morning hymns describes the devil trembling when he sees
Christ himself enter into Hades and cries out, "My spirit trembles, and
now I must cast out Adam and his posterity. A tree brought them to my realm,
but now the tree of the Cross brings them back again to paradise."
In the end, Satan no longer has power over us. He can no
longer keep man captive in hell for all eternity. The Cross is our reminder of
that victory. It is the reminder of the power that all of us possess.
"Death has been swallowed up in victory! Death, where is your victory?
Death, where is your sting?" (I Cor 15:54)
During these dark days of Worlds history, we must not forget
the meaning of the Cross. Although events and logic tell us to despair, the
Cross says something else -- to hope. In the end, the Cross will prevail.
Father Lucas Veronis
is an American Eastern Orthodox priest serving in Albania. - This sermon was
preached on the Sunday of the Cross, March 30, 1997 (Eastern Orthodox Calendar) Reproduced with permission from: DE
KERKKLOK June, 2008: an electronic monthly magazine of the Mother
of God Dutch Orthodox Church, Utrecht, Netherlands.