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In Search Of The Cross
Contributed by Mary Erickson on Sep 16, 2024 (message contributor)
Summary: A sermon for the season following Pentecost, Year B, lectionary 24
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September 15, 2024
Rev. Mary Erickson
Hope Lutheran Church
Mark 8:27-38
In Search of the Cross
Friends, may grace and peace be yours in abundance in the knowledge of God and Christ Jesus our Lord.
Yesterday, September 14, is recognized as Holy Cross Day. The festival commemorates when St. Helena discovered what is believed to be the true cross. Here’s how it happened:
Constantine was the first Roman emperor to convert to Christianity. His mother, Helena, also became a Christian. In the year 326, Constantine sent his mother Helena to the Holy Land on a quest. She was to find the sites significant to the life and ministry of Jesus. Where exactly was Jesus born in Bethlehem? Where did he live in Nazareth? Where did he multiply the loaves and the fishes? Where was Peter’s house in Bethsaida?
In the early 300’s oral memories of these significant sites were still circulating. These clues aided Helena in her search for these sites. And she was very successful in her quest. This also included the site of Jesus’ tomb.
What made it a little tricky was that Jerusalem had been rebuilt after it had been sacked by the Romans. The oral clues led Helena to the site of what was now a temple dedicated to Venus. Helena ordered the temple to be removed and a careful excavation to begin. Underneath the layers, they indeed found a small tomb. But the area also revealed a small hill with three crosses lying in disarray.
Helena surmised that this was the site of Golgotha, where Jesus had been crucified. But there were three crosses. In order to identify which of the three crosses had borne Jesus and which the two thieves, a terminally ill woman was brought there. One by one, she touched the three crosses. And when she touched the third cross, she was immediately healed. This miracle, it was believed, identified the true cross of Jesus.
Helena ordered that a church be constructed over this most holy of sites. And so the Church of the Holy Sepulcher was built. If you travel there today, as you enter you’ll see the small tomb on the ground level. And when you climb a flight of stairs, there you will see an altar built over the rocky outcropping where the crosses were found.
When Helena left Jerusalem and returned to Constantinople, she took a piece of the cross with her. The remainer was housed within the Jerusalem church. However, over repeated wars, that Jerusalem cross was forever lost. The only remaining portion was the section that Helena had taken to Constantinople.
There it remained and was venerated by pilgrims. However, many years later a new emperor faced bankruptcy. In order to generate cash, he had the holy relic divided into pieces and then he sold them off to the highest bidders. A few of these smaller relics still exist today. And that is the story behind what is believed to be Jesus’ true cross. Buried under rubble, divided into pieces, lost to history, and sold to the highest bidder.
Nowadays crosses can be found in abundance. They don’t only adorn our sanctuaries and churches. They don’t just rest atop our steeples. They’ve become fashion statements. Athletes wear blingy gold crosses. We find crosses embossed on coffee mugs and scented candles.
But it wasn’t always this way. In Jesus’ time, a cross was a cruel instrument of death, to be avoided at all costs! Crosses didn’t decorate the walls of family dining rooms. They stood along the byways outside of towns. Criminals were nailed on them and died horrible deaths.
Now, Jesus had an appointment with his own cross. And that cruel end wasn’t something he shied away from. No, this distant cross was his destiny! It was to be the final movement in what was the symphony of his life.
But when he told his disciples about this, well, that just didn’t compute! No way, no way was Jesus’ brilliant ministry supposed to end in such a complete failure! Didn’t he just admit he was the Messiah? Didn’t he just reveal that he’s the anointed one of Israel, the king? The whole point for him going to Jerusalem was to take his throne, not to die!
This just could not be! Peter pulled him aside to try and talk some sense into him. But Jesus’ response just doubled down on the insanity. Jesus called Peter SATAN!
No, it doesn’t make sense. What kind of a religion is this, anyway? Buddha attains enlightenment under the Bodhi tree. Hindus, through repeated cycles of death and rebirth, come into complete harmony with the universe. Their paths lead upward. But in Christianity, our God is crucified on a cross! This is not a recipe for success.
Something is going on with the cross. It’s something more than what meets the eye. How does the Word made flesh, how does the divine incarnate one end his ministry with arrest, condemnation, and death?