Monday 29th April 2024

Home » Featured Today » Currently Reading:

More Important Than Ever… September’s Feast Of The Holy Cross

September 3, 2020 Featured Today No Comments

By JAMES MONTI

The return of the Church’s autumnal feast, the Exaltation of the Holy Cross on September 14, will have an added importance this year, for more than one reason. In a year when most of us were prevented from celebrating Good Friday in church, the arrival of this “little Good Friday” in September, at a time when thankfully many are again free to attend the Church’s liturgical rites, affords us an opportunity to revisit the mystery of Calvary and the victory won by our Savior there.
Yet over the months since the Good Friday of April, the need to venerate the Cross has taken on a new urgency. For this sacred trophy of Christ’s battle and victory over Satan must steel us in a spiritual battle for the very symbols of our faith, including the Holy Cross itself.
As we have been documenting in this column, the campaign of those who by acts of iconoclasm would deny us our right as Catholics to venerate our holy images is nothing new. It is a battle that was initially fought in the first millennium of the Church, and it resumed in earnest in the sixteenth century. The horrific wave of anti-Catholic destruction and bloodshed perpetrated by invading troops during the “Sack of Rome” in May of 1527 has been aptly described as having “had the effect of a second Passion of Christ” (Carlo Maria Cardinal Martini, SJ, Jesuit Art and Spirituality, Principle and Foundation: The Spiritual Exercises and Aesthetic Education, Artes de Mexico, volume 70, June 2004, p. 86), an expression that could well be applied to all such incidents of rage against the things of God.
For what is at stake extends far beyond the holy images and objects being desecrated and destroyed. Such iconoclasm is in fact a veiled attack upon the most fundamental tenets of our faith and the very existence of the Church.
It has been observed that the perpetrators of iconoclasm, whether they admit it to themselves or not, are by their actions tacitly seeking to attack not just the religious image itself as a piece of stone or wood but in many cases the very person that the image portrays. For whatever the original motive of the iconoclast may be, iconoclasm is a slippery slope in that the very act of mocking, desecrating, and smashing an image of Christ or the saints can easily morph into hostility against Christ Himself.
As early as 1520, a crucifixion scene in the Swiss village of Toggenburg was attacked by a local farmer. Protestant rhetoric calling for the removal and destruction of crucifixes together with other religious images, instigated largely by Andreas Bodenstein von Karlstadt in Germany and Ulrich Zwingli in Switzerland in the 1520s, escalated over the decades that followed.
From the sixteenth century until the mid-nineteenth century, the cross, whether as a crucifix or without a corpus, came to be seen and despised as the ultimate symbol of the Roman Catholic Church, derided as “the Greatest Idol in the Church of Rome” and the “Badge of the Whore of Babylon” (quoted respectively from a seventeenth-century New England manuscript in Francis Bremer, “Endecott and the Red Cross: Puritan Iconoclasm in the New World,” Journal of American Studies, volume 24, n. 1, April 1990, p. 18, and Captain John Endecott, quoted in Susan Juster, “Planting the ‘Great Cross’: The Life, and Death, of Crosses in English America,” The William and Mary Quarterly, volume 74, n. 2, April 2017, p. 264).
At a Protestant colloquium in Montbeliard, France, in 1586, the French Calvinist theologian Theodore Beza (1519-1605) declared, “I avow to detest from my very soul the image of the crucifix” (Acta Colloqui Montis Belligartensis, Tubingen, Germany, 1587, session of March 29, 1586, thesis 6, p. 418).
In 1607 the English Puritan cleric Robert Parker (c. 1564-1614) published a tract denouncing both physical crosses and the making of the sign of the cross with one’s hand as “a very ringworm that spreadeth mightily” and “a fertile mother of much superstition”; attacking the Church’s liturgical veneration of the cross, he remarks:
“. . . The Cross as long as he resembleth Christ, he must needs be an image of him and of his death. And seeing his death is represented, mediately by the Cross, on which he died, it must be an image of it likewise. Which, is it not the greatest devil amongst all the idols of Rome, against which the Turk is loosed by God himself? For this Cross though more base than the worm himself of Egypt, which the Apostle maketh the basest, hath nevertheless attained to the honor of the Most High, to wit, to latria, wherewith God himself is honored, and that be means that are more mean than ever any idol had.
“It pleased the Lord to die on a cross, a cursed tree, to show that he did bear our curse,…This saith the Cross hath made me blessed, and worthy ever to be honored. A senseless sophistry; yet so plausible, as that it hath prevailed with many in most places of the earth” (A Scholastical Discourse against Symbolizing with Antichrist in Ceremonies: Especially in the Sign of the Cross, Middelburg, Netherlands, 1607, chapter 21, n. 28, and chapter 2, n. 2, pp. 41-42, 59 — from Early English Texts webpage).
In 1641, as the Puritan Roundheads were nearing the height of their power in England, John Vicars, a Presbyterian, published his virulently iconoclastic tract, The Sinfulness and Unlawfulness of Having or Making the Picture of Christ’s Humanity. Condemning a resurgence of images of Christ in Protestant churches that had arisen during the reign of King Charles I, Vicars decried such images, including crucifixes, as an “epidemical evil,” and that “the simple and mere making and having of the picture of Christ” was “absolutely sinful.”
In Vicars’ arguments one encounters as elsewhere in iconoclastic polemics a reasoning scarcely short of anti-incarnational, condemning the depiction of Christ crucified in a physical form as blasphemous, a profanation, unspiritual, worldly and dangerously carnal, a crude appeal to “all sorts of carnal men and women” (quoted in Julie Spraggon, Puritan Iconoclasm in England, 1640-1660, Ph.D. thesis, University of London, 2000, pp. 31-32).
Iconoclasts like Vicars also opposed crucifixes because they depict Christ in death, evoking associations with the Catholic doctrine of the Mass as a re-presentation of the sacrifice of Calvary. There was also a fear among Protestants that the crucifix by its very straightforward appeal to the senses of the believer had an irresistible attraction that “lured” people into the Catholic Church.
It was only in the face of the growing presence, success, and cultural influence of the Catholic Church in America that by the late nineteenth century many Protestant denominations had begun to allow the cross, albeit a plain one, a place in their church architecture.
Despite this concession, most Protestants continued to oppose the crucifix, made uncomfortable by its unflinching representation of the tortured body of Christ. A nineteenth-century Protestant who had visited a Catholic convent condescendingly complained, “One revolts at the endless pantomime of pain, and wearies of the pine or marble Christs in versatile and studied agonies….Gladly, thankfully, gratefully does the Protestant looker-on turn from this low physical plane to that sublime life which is the Light of men” (C.E. Robins, Putnam’s Monthly, November 1868, quoted in Ryan Smith, “The Cross: Church Symbol and Contest in Nineteenth-Century America,” Church History, volume 70, n. 4, December 2001, pp. 718-719).

The Intellectual Heir

The iconoclast is not content with destroying only the physical objects of Christian worship but seeks also to break into the depths of the human spirit and hack away at the sanctuary within the believer’s soul.
In the words of James Simpson, author of a recently published monograph making the case that modern liberalism is the intellectual heir of the Protestant Reformation, “…the hammer-wielding iconoclast needs above all to move into, and through, the psyche itself, there to lay waste to the imagination” (Permanent Revolution: The Reformation and the Illiberal Roots of Liberalism, Cambridge, Mass., and London, Belknap Press, 2019, p. 173).
This can be seen in the writings of John Calvin (1509-1564). Labeling the rank-and-file Catholic faithful as “the common herd, whose madness in profaning the truth of God exceeds all bounds,” he goes on to denounce their very concept of God:
“The human mind, stuffed as it is with presumptuous rashness, dares to imagine a god suited to its own capacity . . . it substitutes vanity and an empty phantom in the place of God. To these evils another is added. The god whom man has thus conceived inwardly he attempts to embody outwardly. The mind, in this way, conceives the idol, and the hand gives it birth…idolatry has its origin in the idea which men have, that God is not present with them unless his presence is carnally exhibited” (Institutes of the Christian Religion, trans. Henry Beveridge, Edinburgh, Calvin Translation Society, volume 1, 1845, book 1, chapters 5, 11, pp. 77, 129).
As for the relationship between early Protestant iconoclasm and the more modern iconoclasm of rationalistic, leftist, anticlerical, and atheistic militants, which we are witnessing anew in 2020, James Simpson observes, “…the archetype for later revolutionary image destruction in the West is, however, the early modern Protestant Reformation of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries” (Simpson, Permanent Revolution, p. 159).
The answer to the spiritual battle we are facing is the Cross. Our own devotion to the Holy Cross and to the Passion of our Lord and our willingness to suffer for and in union with Christ are the best ways we can respond. In a May 2020 Sunday Mass homily at St. Mary’s Shrine in Warrington, England (administered by the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter), Fr. Alex Stewart, FSSP, reflected upon the value of offering our personal sufferings in the face of present evils, in imitation of Christ Crucified:
“Our Lord travels into the faithless city of Jerusalem, so that He can suffer…this is how the Lord wins the very battle against death itself. This, this is the medium He uses to redeem the human race; not a giant heavenly army, a great battle at the gates of Jerusalem, the overthrowing of the Sanhedrin or the Roman authorities, but by suffering, silently, humbly, in affliction and abandonment, by suffering. . . . By our growing ability to suffer because of the love of God, we are able in fact to deal a death blow to the reckless hatred that our world now drowns in” (Sunday Traditional Latin Mass, May 10, 2020 — transcribed from livestreamed broadcast of the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter, Warrington).
Ave, Crux, spes unica. “Hail, O Cross, our one hope!”

Share Button

2019 The Wanderer Printing Co.

Vatican and USCCB leave transgender policy texts unpublished

While U.S. bishops have made headlines for releasing policies addressing gender identity and pastoral ministry, guidelines on the subject have been drafted but not published by both the U.S. bishops’ conference and the Vatican’s doctrinal office, leaving diocesan bishops to…Continue Reading

Biden says Pope Francis told him to continue receiving communion, amid scrutiny over pro-abortion policies

President Biden said that Pope Francis, during their meeting Friday in Vatican City, told him that he should continue to receive communion, amid heightened scrutiny of the Catholic president’s pro-abortion policies.  The president, following the approximately 90-minute-long meeting, a key…Continue Reading

Federal judge rules in favor of Gov. DeSantis’ mask mandate ban

MIAMI (LifeSiteNews) – A federal judge this week handed Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis another legal victory on his mask mandate ban for schools. On Wednesday, Judge K. Michael Moore of the Southern District of Florida denied a petition from…Continue Reading

The Eucharist should not be received unworthily, says Nigerian cardinal

Priests have a duty to remind Catholics not to receive the Eucharist in a state of serious sin and to make confession easily available, a Nigerian cardinal said at the International Eucharistic Congress on Thursday. “It is still the doctrine…Continue Reading

Donald Trump takes a swipe at Catholics and Jews who did not vote for him

Donald Trump complained about Catholics and Jews who did not vote for him in 2020. The former president made the comments in a conference call featuring religious leaders. The move could be seen to shore up his religious conservative base…Continue Reading

Y Gov. Kathy Hochul Admits Andrew Cuomo Covered Up COVID Deaths, 12,000 More Died Than Reported

When it comes to protecting people from COVID, Andrew Cuomo is already the worst governor in America. New York has the second highest death rate per capita, in part because he signed an executive order putting COVID patients in nursing…Continue Reading

Prayers For Cardinal Burke . . . U.S. Cardinal Burke says he has tested positive for COVID-19

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — U.S. Cardinal Raymond L. Burke said he has tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. In an Aug. 10 tweet, he wrote: “Praised be Jesus Christ! I wish to inform you that I have recently…Continue Reading

Democrats Block Amendment Banning Late-Term Abortions, Stopping Abortions Up to Birth

Senate Democrats have blocked an amendment that would ban abortions on babies older than 20 weeks. During consideration of the multi-trillion spending package, pro-life Louisiana Senator John Kennedy filed an amendment to ban late-term abortions, but Democrats steadfastly support killing…Continue Reading

Transgender student wins as U.S. Supreme Court rebuffs bathroom appeal

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday handed a victory to a transgender former public high school student who waged a six-year legal battle against a Virginia county school board that had barred him from using the bathroom corresponding…Continue Reading

New York priest accused by security guard of assault confirms charges have now been dropped

NEW YORK, June 17, 2021 (LifeSiteNews) — A New York priest has made his first public statement regarding the dismissal of charges against him.  Today Father George W. Rutler reached out to LifeSiteNews and other media today with the following…Continue Reading

21,000 sign petition protesting US Catholic bishops vote on Biden, abortion

More than 21,000 people have signed a letter calling for U.S. Catholic bishops to cancel a planned vote on whether President Biden should receive communion.  Biden, a Catholic, supports abortion rights and has long come under attack from some Catholics over that…Continue Reading

Bishop Gorman seeks candidates to fill two full time AP level teaching positions for the 2021-2022 school year in the subject areas of Calculus/Statistics and Physics

Bishop Thomas K. Gorman Regional Catholic School is a college preparatory school located in Tyler, Texas. It is an educational ministry of the Catholic Diocese of Tyler led by Bishop Joseph Strickland. The sixth through twelfth grade school provides a…Continue Reading

Untitled 5 Untitled 2

Attention Readers:

  Welcome to our website. Readers who are familiar with The Wanderer know we have been providing Catholic news and orthodox commentary for 150 years in our weekly print edition.


  Our daily version offers only some of what we publish weekly in print. To take advantage of everything The Wanderer publishes, we encourage you to su
bscribe to our flagship weekly print edition, which is mailed every Friday or, if you want to view it in its entirety online, you can subscribe to the E-edition, which is a replica of the print edition.
 
  Our daily edition includes: a selection of material from recent issues of our print edition, news stories updated daily from renowned news sources, access to archives from The Wanderer from the past 10 years, available at a minimum charge (this will be expanded as time goes on). Also: regularly updated features where we go back in time and highlight various columns and news items covered in The Wanderer over the past 150 years. And: a comments section in which your remarks are encouraged, both good and bad, including suggestions.
 
  We encourage you to become a daily visitor to our site. If you appreciate our site, tell your friends. As Catholics we must band together to rediscover our faith and share it with the world if we are to effectively counter a society whose moral culture seems to have no boundaries and a government whose rapidly extending reach threatens to extinguish the rights of people of faith to practice their religion (witness the HHS mandate). Now more than ever, vehicles like The Wanderer are needed for clarification and guidance on the issues of the day.

Catholic, conservative, orthodox, and loyal to the Magisterium have been this journal’s hallmarks for five generations. God willing, our message will continue well into this century and beyond.

Joseph Matt
President, The Wanderer Printing Co.

Untitled 1

Catechism

Today . . .

U.S. birth and fertility rates drop to record lows, according to CDC report

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Apr 26, 2024 / 16:45 pm Provisional data published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) this week showed that the fertility rate in the United States hit a record low and the total number of births in the country was the lowest it’s been in decades.  According to the report, slightly fewer than 3.6 million babies were born in 2023, or 54.4 births per 1,000 women aged 15 through…Continue Reading

Kamala Harris Heads to Arizona to Promote Abortions Up to Birth

Kamala Harris is visiting Arizona today to showcase the Biden-Harris Administration’s radical support of unlimited abortion. “Kamala Harris has become the abortion czar of the Biden Administration,” said Carol Tobias, president of the National Right to Life Committee. “Instead of joining with the pro-life movement to build programs and safety nets to help promote real solutions for women and their preborn children, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris have engaged in fearmongering and propaganda,” Tobias continue

May Everyone Have a Blessed and Joyful Easter

Is Easter being replaced with the ‘Transgender Day of Visibility’?

Two observances — Easter and the recently contrived “International Transgender Day of Visibility” — fall on Sunday, March 31 this year, causing some to wonder “Is Easter being replaced with the ‘Transgender Day of Visibility?’” It’s a valid question. For more than a few, it certainly will. Others might dismiss this as nothing more than a coincidence. That would be a mistake. On the last day of this month, we will witness a clash of religions as…Continue Reading

Abortion Advocates No Longer Consider It “A Necessary Evil,” They Celebrate Killing Babies

Last week, Kamala Harris became the first vice president in U.S. history to make a public visit to an abortion clinic. Though the Democratic party’s support for abortion is nothing new, Harris’ Planned Parenthood appearance does illustrate how that support has become a flagrant celebration of abortion as a public and personal good, essential to both “freedom” and to “healthcare.” At the appearance, Harris proclaimed,  It is only right and fair that people have access…Continue Reading

The King of Kings

Cindy Paslawski We are at the end of the Church year. We began with Advent a year ago, commemorating the time awaiting the coming of the Christ and we are ending these weeks later with a vision of the future, a vision of Christ the King of the Universe on His throne before us all.…Continue Reading

7,000 Pro-Lifers March In London

By STEVEN ERTELT LONDON (LifeNews) — Over the weekend, some seven thousand pro-life people in the UK participated in the March for Life in London to protest abortion.They marched to Parliament Square on Saturday, September 2 under the banner of “Freedom to Live” and had to deal with a handful of radical abortion activists.During the…Continue Reading

An Appeal For Prayer For The Armenian People

By RAYMOND LEO CARDINAL BURKE (Editor’s Note: His Eminence Raymond Cardinal Burke on August 29, 2023, issued this prayer for the Armenian people, noting their unceasing love for Christ, even in the face of persecution.) + + On the Feast of the Beheading of St. John the Baptist, having a few days ago celebrated the…Continue Reading

Robert Hickson, Founding Member Of Christendom College, Dies At 80

By MAIKE HICKSON FRONT ROYAL, Va. (LifeSiteNews) — Robert David Hickson, Jr., of Front Royal, Va., died at his home on September 2, 2023, at 21:29 p.m. after several months of suffering and after having received the Last Rites of the Catholic Church. He was surrounded by friends and family.Robert is survived by me —…Continue Reading

The Real Hero Of “Sound of Freedom”… Says The Film Has Strengthened The Fight Against Child Trafficking

By ANA PAULA MORALES (CNA) —Tim Ballard, a former U.S. Homeland Security agent who risked his life to fight child trafficking, discussed the impact of the movie Sound of Freedom, which is based on his work, in an August 29 interview with ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner. “I’ve spent more than 20 years helping…Continue Reading

Advertisement

Our Catholic Faith (Section B of print edition)

Catholic Replies

Editor’s Note: This lesson on medical-moral issues is taken from the book Catholicism & Ethics. Please feel free to use the series for high schoolers or adults. We will continue to welcome your questions for the column as well. The email and postal addresses are given at the end of this column. Special Course On Catholicism And Ethics (Pages 53-59)…Continue Reading

Color Politics An Impediment To Faith

By FR. KEVIN M. CUSICK The USCCB is rightly concerned about racism, as they should be about any sin. In the 2018 statement Open Wide Our Hearts, they affirm the dignity of every human person: “But racism still profoundly affects our culture, and it has no place in the Christian heart. This evil causes great harm to its victims, and…Continue Reading

Trademarks Of The True Messiah

By MSGR. CHARLES POPE (Editor’s Note: Msgr. Charles Pope posted this essay on September 2, and it is reprinted here with permission.) + + In Sunday’s Gospel the Lord firmly sets before us the need for the cross, not as an end in itself, but as the way to glory. Let’s consider the Gospel in three stages.First: The Pattern That…Continue Reading

A Beacon Of Light… The Holy Cross And Jesus’ Unconditional Love

By FR. RICHARD D. BRETON Each year on September 14 the Church celebrates the Feast Day of the Exultation of the Holy Cross. The Feast Day of the Triumph of the Holy Cross commemorates the day St. Helen found the True Cross. It is fitting then, that today we should focus on the final moments of Jesus’ life on the…Continue Reading

Our Ways Must Become More Like God’s Ways

By FR. ROBERT ALTIER Twenty-Fifth Sunday In Ordinary Time (YR A) Readings: Isaiah 55:6-9Phil. 1:20c-24, 27aMatt. 20:1-16a In the first reading today, God tells us through the Prophet Isaiah that His thoughts are not our thoughts and His ways are not our ways. This should not come as a surprise to anyone, especially when we look at what the Lord…Continue Reading

The Devil And The Democrats

By FR. DENIS WILDE, OSA States such as Minnesota, California, Maryland, and others, in all cases with Democrat-controlled legislatures, are on a fast track to not only allow unborn babies to be murdered on demand as a woman’s “constitutional right” but also to allow infanticide.Our nation has gotten so used to the moral evil of killing in the womb that…Continue Reading

Crushed But Unbroken . . . The Martyrdom Of St. Margaret Clitherow

By RAY CAVANAUGH The late-1500s were a tough time for Catholics in England, where the Reformation was in full gear. A 1581 law prohibited Catholic religious ceremonies. And a 1584 Act of Parliament mandated that all Catholic priests leave the country or else face execution. Some chose to remain, however, so they could continue serving the faithful.Also taking huge risks…Continue Reading

Advertisement(2)