The Precious and
Life-Giving Cross of Christ
This was the tree on which Christ, like a king on a
chariot, destroyed the devil, the lord of death, and freed the human race from
his tyranny. This was the tree upon which the Lord, like a brave warrior
wounded in hands, feet and side, healed the wounds of sin that the evil serpent
had inflicted on our nature. A tree once caused our death, but now a tree
brings life. Once deceived by a tree, we have now repelled the cunning serpent
by a tree. What an astonishing transformation! That death should become life,
that decay should become immortality, that shame should become glory! Well
might the holy Apostle exclaim: Far be it from me to glory except in the cross
of our Lord Jesus Christ, by which the world has been crucified to me, and I to
the world! The supreme wisdom that flowered on the cross has shown the folly of
worldly wisdom’s pride. The knowledge of all good, which is the fruit of the
cross, has cut away the shoots of wickedness.
The wonders accomplished through this tree were
foreshadowed clearly even by the mere types and figures that existed in the
past. Meditate on these, if you are eager to learn. Was it not the wood of a
tree that enabled Noah, at God’s command, to escape the destruction of the
flood together with his sons, his wife, his sons’ wives and every kind of
animal? And surely the rod of Moses prefigured the cross when it changed water
into blood, swallowed up the false serpents of Pharaoh’s magicians, divided the
sea at one stroke and then restored the waters to their normal course, drowning
the enemy and saving God’s own people?
Aaron’s rod, which blossomed in one day in proof of
his true priesthood, was another figure of the cross, and did not Abraham foreshadow
the cross when he bound his son Isaac and placed him on the pile of wood?
By the cross death was slain and Adam was restored to
life. The cross is the glory of all the apostles, the crown of the martyrs, the
sanctification of the saints. By the cross we put on Christ and cast aside our
former self. By the cross we, the sheep of Christ, have been gathered into one
flock, destined for the sheepfolds of heaven.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of
Readings
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