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Formed by the cross
Behind the altar in my parish church stands a large crucifix. I cannot
tell you just how tall it stands, but simply know that it towers above
us, a symbol of Christ’s love that cannot be ignored. Only once a year
is the corpus from this crucifix removed and the cross taken out of the
floor. This is the cross we venerate on Good Friday. The sanctuary was
designed in a manner that leaves the space around the base of the cross
open so that people may pray at the foot of the cross if their hearts lead
them there. This cross, Christ’s cross, must be embraced in order to fully
experience its transformative power in our lives.
Forming the community
“What part of ‘take up your cross’ do you not understand?” That was
the question I found myself asking a women’s retreat team not long ago.
The guide for discussion that we were using included a question that asked,
“How are you called to take up your cross at this time, and how are you
given strength to do so?” The women were stymied. Only one of 15 seemed
to have any real understanding of the question, let alone the ability to
reflect and formulate a response. The guide for discussion they were using
was one I had written, and since it was to be used by groups throughout
our parish for many months, I needed to know, “What part of ‘take up your
cross’ do you not understand?” Group after group seemed to experience the
same sort of confusion, blank incomprehension, or, perhaps, denial. Taking
up our cross is not something that arises in everyday conversation, I suppose.
The circumstances surrounding most of our lives assure us that we need
never experience anything close to a cross, so it is easy for us to attempt
to flee the cross rather than to find the strength to embrace it.
Formed through life within the community
I don’t know if my pastor remembered hearing of these discussions or
if he has had similar ones himself, but a few months later, in a strikingly
profound homily, Father Jan spoke of Christ’s victory over death, his triumph
of the cross. He talked about how each of us probably envisions the difficulties
we might experience in life. We mentally prepare ourselves for challenge;
we think we are ready to face whatever life might have in store. And then,
often, we face something we would never have imagined, a challenge we feel
is beyond our capacity to meet. Christ, Father Jan explained, probably
imagined he would meet with disbelief and mocking; yet on the night before
his passion, Jesus faced a cross that seemed almost too great to bear and
still found the strength to pray, “Not my will but yours be done” (Lk 22:42).
Each of us faces the cross, and by definition, the cross will be great,
but God’s love, Christ’s victory over the cross, is greater.
The morning Father Jan offered that homily sticks in my memory as being
one of the most powerful experiences of prayer I have encountered. It was
7:30 on Sunday morning, and the depth of prayer was palpable. Yet I wondered,
“So is it only the 7:30 a.m. folks — those who are truly committed to their
faith, enough to rise early to begin the day with the Eucharist — who will
respond to Christ’s message as voiced by our pastor?” The next week told
the tale. I heard from folks who were at 5 p.m. Mass the evening before
and from ones who were at the 6 p.m. on Sunday night. All spoke of the
ways in which they had been moved to really reflect on the part that faith
plays in their lives.
Forming pastoral practice
Suddenly it seemed that being a Christian meant more than loving, serving,
becoming more selfless. Suddenly, people were talking about their crosses,
the ones they have already carried and the ones yet to be embraced or even
imagined. Suddenly, it became apparent that people need and want to be
given the ability to articulate what the cross means for them. What part
of “take up your cross” do we not understand? That is still a question
to be answered, over and over again. Perhaps we need to ask the question
more often and invite conversation around the question. Perhaps that is
part of real pastoral practice. ML
Leisa Anslinger is pastoral associate for faith formation
at Immaculate Heart of Mary Parish in Cincinnati. Author of Here
Comes Everybody! Whole Community Catechesis in the Parish, she is a
national speaker on topics including whole-community catechesis and pastoral
leadership.
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