My preference for realistic religious art (especially in churches) has been with me for decades. In 1993, I wrote the
following …
It is easy to accept shining, sterile depictions of Jesus’s
passion. It’s easy to prefer silvered crosses with a victorious Christ
upon them, for these do not ask much of us. ‘Take up your cross and
follow Me’ can be distant words then, words from which we are insulated by a
safe coating of bronze.
His body did not shine that day, so long ago. He was nailed to a very real wood cross; He was bruised and sweating and
blood-stained. His knees were scraped, His face contorted with
pain. Smells were of blood and dust and just-hammered metal. There
was no upbeat music that day; there were no songbooks, no organs, no guitars. There
were just the moans of men dying and friends watching them die. There were
crowd-sounds, possibly a joke or two, the occasional slap of a whip striking
the ground. Soldiers held back mourners and yelled out commands and
probably thought about what they would do after work.
Overhead, a few clouds gathered. Rain came then,
soaking onlookers and washing rivulets of blood into the ground. Three
men hung dying that day, on crosses not made of silver. They were pierced
through with nails not coated with gold. Three men writhed in pain that
day, they sweated and bled; two of them were heard praying, and all of them
died.
And how grateful we can be that the scene has been removed
from us, safely tucked away in time, safely burnished, safely incensed.
How safe it is to hear the words ‘take up your cross and follow Me’ when
looking at a cross made of silver, when meditating on a resurrected, stylized
and sterile Jesus. Yes, He was resurrected and yes He is crowned.
Yes, He lives today; He is not dead any longer. Yes, it is appropriate to
celebrate His rising, for risen is how He lives now among us.
But no, it is not appropriate to totally forget the
price He paid for our redemption. No, it is not appropriate to ignore the
love poured out on us at Calvary, nor to ignore at what cost we
answer the call to ‘come, follow Me…'
It is easy to count the cost when that cost is only Mass on Sunday and no meat on Good Friday. It’s easy to embrace crosses of silver. It is easy to forget to repent, to forget the love of so great a Lover, to forget to reform my life and allow my own selfish will to be crucified today...
Theology Is A Verb
Text not in quotes
It is easy to count the cost when that cost is only Mass on Sunday and no meat on Good Friday. It’s easy to embrace crosses of silver. It is easy to forget to repent, to forget the love of so great a Lover, to forget to reform my life and allow my own selfish will to be crucified today...
Theology Is A Verb
Text not in quotes
Pope JPII comment after viewing Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ "it is as it was"....
ReplyDeletewhat better remedy against sterlizing the suffering of Christ?
what better hope than seeing at end, He Is Risen? +++
Wonderfully said, Dawn. Thank you.
DeleteA powerful meditation during this most holy of weeks. Thank you, Nancy!
ReplyDeleteMay it be a blessed, holy time for you, Mary.
Delete