Triumph
of the Holy Cross
by Rev. Nicholas
Cirillo

September 14
The Feast of the Triumph of the Holy Cross commemorates
the victory that Our Lord accomplished through his death and resurrection.
The cross is a mark of great suffering and humiliation, but it
is a horrific symbol which we adore because through it we have
come to know the great love that Jesus has for us, and through
the wounds that it inflicted, we have been healed.
The Cross of Jesus Christ was found in the fourth century by St.
Helena, the mother of the Emperor Constantine. According to the
legend, a goodly Jew named Judah was the only person who knew of
the location of the cross. Under pressure from St. Helena, he revealed
that it had been buried under the temple of Venus which had been
built by Emperor Hadrian at Golgotha. As she found three crosses
buried at the site, it seemed impossible to determine which one
was the cross of Christ. Just then a funeral procession was passing
by the place, and Helen had all three of the crosses brought to
the side of the dead body. When the third cross was placed upon
the dead man, he rose to life, confirming that this was indeed
the life-giving cross of Jesus.
There are probably hundreds of legends and stories that are attached
to the finding and veneration of the cross (each with a hundred
variations), and all of them seek to remind us of how dearly we
value the sacrifice the Jesus made by carrying it. The cross is
the burden that he lifted when he walked among us, it is the symbol
of his suffering, it is the altar on which he as our high priest
offered himself as the sweetest victim. It is the weapon by which
the powers of hell are vanquished, it is the bridge between heaven
and earth, and it is the balance on which the price of our redemption
has been measured out.
And so as we honor the cross which Christ bore for us, we pray
that we might find in his example the strength to bear our own
burdens with patience and to triumph over our own difficulties
assisted by strength that comes from above.
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