Saint Gregory Palamas
The Cross of Christ was mysteriously proclaimed in advance and 
foreshadowed from generations of old and no one was ever reconciled with
 God except by the power of the Cross. After our First Parents 
transgressed against God through the tree in paradise, sin came to life,
 but we died, submitting, even before physical death, to the death of 
the soul, its separation from God. After the transgression we lived in 
sin and according to the flesh. Sin “is not subject to the law of God, 
neither indeed can be. So then they that are in the flesh cannot please 
God” (Romans 8.7-8).
As the apostle says, “The flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the 
Spirit against the flesh” (Galatians 5.17). God, however, is Spirit, 
absolute Goodness and Virtue, and our own spirit is after His image and 
likeness, although sin has made it good for nothing. So how could anyone
 at all be spiritually renewed and reconciled with God, unless sin and 
life according to the flesh had been abolished? The Cross of Christ is 
this abolition of sin. One of our God-bearing Fathers was asked by an 
unbeliever if he really believed in Christ crucified. “Yes”, he replied,
 “I believe in Him who crucified sin.” God Himself has borne witness 
that there were many who were His friends before and after the law, when
 the Cross had not yet been revealed. David, the king and prophet, says,
 as if there were definitely friends of God in his day, “How precious 
also are thy friends unto me, O God!” (Psalm 139.17 LXX). I shall now 
show you, if you listen attentively for the love of God, how it was that
 people were called friends of God before the Cross.
Although the man of sin, the son of lawlessness (2 Thessalonians 
2.3), by which I mean the Antichrist, has not yet come, the theologian 
whom Christ loved says, “Even now, Beloved, there is antichrist” (1 John
 2.18). In the same way, the Cross existed in the time of our ancestors,
 even before it was accomplished. The great Paul teaches us absolutely 
clearly that Antichrist is among us, even though he has not yet come, 
saying, “His mystery doth already work in you” (2 Thessalonians 2.7). In
 exactly the same way Christ’s Cross was among our forefathers before it
 came into being, because its mystery was working in them.
Leaving aside Abel, Seth, Enos, Enoch, Noah, and all those up until 
Noah who were pleasing to God, and their contemporaries, I shall begin 
with Abraham, who was called the father of many nations, the Jews’ 
father after the flesh and ours by faith. As I am to start with this 
spiritual father of ours, his good beginning and God’s initial call to 
him, what were the first words God spoke to him? “Get thee out of thy 
country, and from thy kindred, unto a land that I will show thee” 
(Genesis 12.1). This utterance certainly bears within it the mystery of 
the Cross, for it is exactly what Paul says when he glories in the 
Cross: “The world is crucified unto me” (Galatians 6.14). When someone 
had fled his home country or the world without turning back, for him his
 country according to the flesh and the world have been put to death and
 ceased to exist, and this is the Cross.
God said to Abraham, before he had fled from his life with ungodly 
men, “Get thee out of thy country unto a land”, not, that I will give 
thee, but “that I will show thee” (Genesis 12.1), so that through this 
land another, spiritual land might be shown. What were God’s first words
 to Moses once he had fled from Egypt and ascended the mountain? “Put 
off thy shoes from off thy feet” (Exodus 3.5). This is another mystery 
of the Cross which follows appropriately upon the first. “You have come 
out of Egypt”, says God, “you have left the service of Pharaoh, and have
 despised the fact that you were called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter. 
That world of evil servitude has been dissolved and ceased to exist, as 
far as you are concerned. Nevertheless you still need something more.” 
What can that be? “To take your shoes from off your feet, to lay aside 
the coats of skin (Genesis 3.21) with which sin clothed you and in which
 it is at work, separating you from the holy ground. Take these shoes 
from your feet”, which is to say, “do not live any longer according to 
the flesh and in sin, but let that life which is opposed to God be 
abolished and put to death. And let the way of thinking based on the 
flesh (Romans 8.6-7), and the law in your members warring against the 
law of your mind, and bringing you into captivity to the law of sin 
(Romans 7.23-8.2), no longer hold sway, nor be active, for it has been 
put to death by the power of this vision of God.” Surely this is the 
Cross. In the divine Paul’s words, the Cross is to have crucified “the 
flesh with the afflictions and lusts” (Galatians 5.24).
“Put off”, He says, “thy shoes from off thy feet” (Exodus 3.5). These
 words to Moses revealed that the earth was to be hallowed through the 
Cross after the manifestation of our Lord and God and Saviour Jesus 
Christ. At that time, as he looked at that great spectacle of the 
burning bush which seemed cool as the dew, Moses foresaw the coming of 
Christ, which was then in the future. The vision in God of the Cross is a
 mystery greater than that earlier mystery. The great Paul and our holy 
Fathers hint that there are two mysteries. For Paul not only says, “The 
world is crucified unto me”, but adds, “and I to the world” (Galatians 
6.14). The Fathers, for their part, command us not to hasten to ascend 
the cross before the Cross, as though there were definitely two words of
 the Cross and two mysteries.
The first mystery of the Cross is flight from the world, and parting 
from our relatives according to the flesh, if they are a hindrance to 
piety and a devout life, and training our body, which Paul tells us is 
of some value (1 Timothy 4.8). In these ways the world and sin are 
crucified to us, once we have fled from them. According to the second 
mystery of the Cross, however, we are crucified to the world and the 
passions, once they have fled from us. It is not of course possible for 
them to leave us completely and not be at work in our thoughts, unless 
we attain to contemplation of God. When, through action, we approach 
contemplation and cultivate and cleanse our inner man, searching for the
 divine treasure which we ourselves have hidden, and considering the 
kingdom of God within us, then it is that we crucify ourselves to the 
world and the passions. Through meditation of this a certain warmth is 
born in our heart, which cleanses away evil thoughts like flies, 
instills spiritual peace and consolation in our soul, and bestows 
sanctification on our body. As the psalmist says, “My heart was hot 
within me, while I was musing the fire burned” (Psalm 39.3). One of our 
God-bearing Fathers taught us about this, saying, “Strive as hard as you
 can to ensure that your inner labour is according to God’s will, and 
you will conquer the outward passions.” The great Paul, urging us on in 
the same direction, says, “Walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil 
the lusts of the flesh” (Galatians 5.16). Elsewhere he exhorts, “Stand 
therefore, having your loins firt about with truth” (Ephesians 6.14). 
For the contemplative part of the soul strengthens and supports the part
 concerned with desires, and chases away fleshly lusts. The great Peter 
tells us with absolute clarity what the references to the loins and the 
truth mean. “Wherefore”, he says, “gird up the loins of your mind, be 
sober, and hope to the end for the grace that is to be brought unto you 
at the revelation of Jesus Christ” (1 Peter 1.13).
Since it is not possible for the evil passions and the world to leave
 us completely and not be at work in our thoughts, unless we attain to 
contemplation of God, inasmuch as such contemplation is also the mystery
 of the Cross, which crucifies those who are worthy of it to the world. 
That vision which Moses had of the burning bush not consumed by the 
fire, was also a mystery of the Cross, greater and more perfect than the
 mystery in the time of Abraham. Is is then the case that Moses was 
initiated into the more perfect mystery of the Cross, whereas Abraham 
was not? That would be unreasonable. In fact, Abraham was not initiated 
at the time when he was called, but afterwards he was, once, twice, and 
in fact many times, though we do not have enough time to relate 
everything now.
I shall remind you of Abraham’s most wonderful vision of God, when he
 clearly saw the one God in three persons, before He had been proclaimed
 to be such (Genesis 18.1-16). “The Lord appeared unto him by the oak of
 Mamre; and he lifted up his eyes and looked, and lo, three men stood by
 him: and he ran to meet them.” He actually saw the one God who appeared
 to him as three. “God appeared unto him”, it says, “and, lo, three 
men.” Having run to meet the three men, however, he addressed them as 
one, saying, “My Lord, if now I have found favour in thy sight, pass not
 away from thy servant.” The three then discourse with him as though 
they were one. “And he said unto Abraham, Where is Sarah thy wife? I 
will certainly return unto thee about this same time of year: and Sarah 
thy wife shall have a son.” As the aged Sarah laughed on hearing this, 
“the Lord said, Wherefore did Sarah laugh?” Notice that the one God is 
three hypostases, and the three hypostases are one Lord, for it says, 
“The Lord said”.
This is how the mystery of the Cross worked in Abraham. As for Isaac,
 he himself prefigured Him who was nailed to the Cross for, like Christ,
 he was obedient to his father unto death. The ram offered instead of 
him (Genesis 22.13) clearly foreshadowed the Lamb of God who was led to 
the slaughter for our sake. Even the thicket in which the ram was caught
 contained the mystery of the sign of the Cross, for it was called the 
thicket of “Sabek”, meaning the thicket of forgiveness (Genesis 22.13 
LXX), just as the Cross was called the wood of salvation. In Isaac’s 
son, Jacob, the mystery and sign of the Cross were also at work, for he 
increased his flocks by means of wood and water (Genesis 30.37-43). The 
wood prefigured the wood of the Cross, an the water, holy baptism, which
 holds within it the mystery of the Cross. “We were baptized into 
Christ’s death”, says the apostle (Romans 6.3). Christ, too, increased 
His human flocks by means of wood and water, the Cross and baptism.
When Jacob bowed himself upon the end of his staff and blessed his 
grandchildren with his hand crossed (Genesis 48.9-20), he brought the 
sign of the Cross even more clearly to light. Because he was obedient to
 his forefathers from start to finish, he was beloved and blessed, even 
though Esau hated him for this. He bore every temptation with courage, 
and the mystery of the Cross was at work throughout his whole life. That
 is why God said, “Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated” (Romans 
9.13 and Malachi 1.2-3). Something similar, brethren, happens in our 
case. When someone obeys his earthly and spiritual fathers in accordance
 with the apostolic commandment saying, “Children, obey your parents” 
(Ephesians 6.1), he is loved by God as having become in this respect 
like His beloved Son (Matthew 3.17; 17.5; Mark 1.11; 9.7; Luke 3.22; 
9.35; 2 Peter 1.17). But the disobedient son is hateful to God because 
he is a stranger to any resemblance to His beloved Son. Solomon the wise
 man makes it clear that this does not just apply to Jacob and Esau, but
 to everyone at all times. “An obedient son”, he says, “is unto life: 
but the disobedient is unto destruction” (Proverbs 13.1 LXX).
Surely Jacob, the son of obedience, attained to the greater mystery 
of the Cross, by which I mean the vision of God through which a person 
is more perfectly crucified to sin, dies to it and lives to virtue? He 
actually bears witness himself to his vision and his salvation. “For I 
have seen God”, he says, “face to face, and my soul is saved” (Genesis 
32.30 LXX). Where are the people who still go along with the loathsome 
prattle of those heretics who have appeared in our day? Let them hear 
that Jacob saw God’s face, and not only did he not lose his life but, as
 he says himself, he was also saved, even though God said, “There shall 
no man see me, and live” (Exodus 33.20). Surely there cannot be two 
Gods, one whose face can be seen by the saints, the other whose face is 
above vision. Perish the impious thought! The face of God visible at the
 time of His manifestation to those who are worthy is His energy and 
grace. Whereas His face which is never seen is what is sometimes called 
the nature of God, and is beyond the scope of any manifestation or 
vision. As it is written, “No one hath stood in the substance and 
essence of the Lord” (Jeremiah 23.18 LXX), and either seen God’s nature 
or made it known. So contemplation in God and the sacred mystery of the 
Cross do not just drive away evil passions, and the devils who devise 
them, from the soul, but also heretical doctrines. They refute the 
advocates of such ideas, and thrust them outside the boundaries of 
Christ’s Holy Church, within which we have the privelege now to 
celebrate and declare the grace and energy of the Cross among our 
Fathers in the time before the Cross.
The mystery of the Cross was working in Abraham, whereas his son 
Isaac himself prefigured the one who was afterwards crucified. In the 
same way, the mystery of the Cross was at work throughout Jacob’s life, 
while Jacob’s son Joseph was himself a type and mystery of the divine 
and human Word who was later crucified. Joseph was led to the slaughter 
through jealousy, by his kinsmen according to the flesh, for whose sake 
his father sent him, just as was later the case with Christ. We should 
not be surprised, however, that Joseph was not murdered but sold. Isaac 
was not killed either. These men prefigured the truth that was to come, 
but were not themselves this truth. We can, however, discern in them the
 twofold mystery of Christ’s twofold nature. Their being led to the 
slaughterr foreshadowed the passion according to the flesh of Him who 
was the God-man, whereas the fact that they did not suffer foretold the 
impassible nature of His divinity. It was the same with regard to Jacob 
and Abraham. Although they were tempted, they were victorious, which is 
what the Scriptures clearly tell us about Christ. Of these four men who 
were renowned for their virtue and devoutness in the time before the 
law, two, Abraham and Jacob, had the mystery of the Cross at work in 
their lives, whereas the other two, Isaac and Joseph, themselves 
proclaimed the mystery of the Cross beforehand in a marvellous way.
But what about Moses, who was the first to receive the law from God 
and to share it with others? He was himself saved by means of wood and 
water before the law was given, when he was exposed to the Nile’s 
currents, hidden away in an ark (Exodus 2.3-10). And by means of wood 
and water he saved the people of Israel, revealing the Cross by the 
wood, holy baptism by water. Paul, who had looked upon the mysteries, 
says openly, “They were all baptized into Moses in the cloud” (1 
Corinthians 10.2). He also bears witness that, even before the events 
concerning the sea and his staff, Moses willingly endured Christ’s 
Cross, “Esteeming”, he says, “the reproach of Christ greater riches than
 the treasures of Egypt” (Hebrews 11.26). For the Cross is the reproach 
of Christ from the standpoint of foolish men. As Paul himself says of 
Christ, “He endured the Cross, despising the shame” (Hebrews 12.2). Far 
in advance, Moses proclaimed in the clearest possible way the figure and
 form of the Cross and the salvation this sign would bring. For he stood
 his staff upright and stretched out his hands above it and, when he had
 formed himself into the shape of a cross upon his staff, this sight 
completely routed Amalek (Exodus 17.8-13). Again, by placing the serpent
 of brass sideways upon a standard, he publicly raised up the sign of 
the Cross and commanded the Jews who had been bitten by serpents to look
 upon it as a means of salvation, and so he healed the serpents’ bites 
(Numbers 21.4-9).
Time fails me to tell of Joshua and his fellow judges and prophets, 
or David and his successors who, by the working of the mystery of the 
Cross within them, dried up rivers (2 Kings 19.24; Isaiah 37.25), made 
the sun stand still (Joshua 10.13), razed the cities of the ungodly 
(Genesis 19.25; 2 Peter 2.6), became mighty in war, put foreign armies 
to flight, escaped the edge of the sword, quenched the violence of fire,
 stopped the mouths of lions, put kings to shame (Hebrews 11.33-34; 
Judges 4.6; 13.24; Daniel 6.23; 3.23-25, 49-50), reduced captains of 
fifty to ashes (2 Kings 1.13), raised the dead (1 Kings 17.23; 2 Kings 
4.36), made the heavens stand still with a word (2 Kings 20.10-11), then
 let them go, preventing the clouds from giving rain, then letting them 
do so. If Paul says that faith has done all these things (Hebrews 
11.32-40), it is because faith is power unto salvation, and all things 
are possible for him who believes. Clearly the Cross has this same power
 for believers. “For the preaching of the Cross”, to quote Paul again, 
“is to them that perish foolishness, but unto us which are being saved 
it is the power of God” (1 Corinthians 1.18).
If we move on from all those who lived before or under the law, the 
Lord Himself, “for whom are all things, and by whom are all things” 
(Hebrews 2.10), said before the Cross, “He that taketh not his cross, 
and followeth after me, is not worthy of me” (Matthew 10.38). Notice 
that even before the Cross was fixed in the ground, it was the Cross 
which brought salvation. When the Lord spoke openly beforehand of His 
passion and death on the Cross, Peter could not bear to hear. Knowing 
the Lord’s power, he entreated Him, saying, “Be it far from thee, Lord: 
this shall not be unto thee” (Matthew 16.22). The Lord reprimanded him 
because in this respect his thinking was human not divine. And “when he 
had called the people unto him with his disciples also, he said unto 
them, Whosoever will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up 
his cross, and follow me. For whosoever will save his soul shall lose 
it; but whosoever shall lose his soul for my sake and the gospel’s, the 
same shall save it” (Mark 9.34-35; Luke 9.23; Matthew 16.24-25).
He also invited the people together with his disciples, and then 
announced and proclaimed these great and marvellous throughts which are 
obviously from God not from men. This was to make it clear that such 
things were not demanded solely of his chosen disciples, but of everyone
 who believes in Him. To follow Christ means to live according to His 
Gospel and to give proof of every virtue and of true piety. The fact 
that anyone wishing to follow Him must deny himself and take up his 
cross means he must not spare himself when the moment comes, but be 
ready to die a dishonourable death for the sake of virtue and the truth 
of holy doctrines. Though it be a great and marvellous thing for someone
 to deny himself and surrender himself to extreme dishonour and death, 
it is not contrary to reason. When earthly kings go to war, they do not 
let people follow them who are not prepared to die for them. So it is 
not surprising that the King of heaven, who came to live on earth 
according to His promise, should seek such people as His followers in 
His attack upon the common enemy of the human race. Earthly kings can 
neither revive those killed in war, nor reward them fittingly for 
bearing the brunt of the battle. What could someone who is no longer 
alive receive from them? But in the Lord there is hope even for those 
who have died, if their death was in defence of what is sacred. To His 
followers who were daring in battle the Lord gives the reward of eternal
 life.
Whereas earthly kings require those who follow them to be prepared to
 die for them, the Lord gave Himself over to death for our sake and 
commands us to be ready to die not for His sake, but for ours. To make 
it clear that it is for our own sake, he adds, “For whosoever will save 
his soul shall lose it; but whosoever shall lose his soul for my sake 
and the gospel’s, the same shall save it” (Mark 8.35). What does this 
mean, that anyone who wants to save it shall lose it, and anyone who 
loses it shall save it? Man is twofold, consisting of our outward man, 
the body, and our inward man, the soul. When our outward man gives 
himself over to death, he loses his soul, being separated from it. But 
when someone loses his soul for Christ and the Gospel, he clearly saves 
and gains it, because he has procured for it eternal life in heaven. In 
the resurrection he will recover it, and by means of it he will become, 
even in his body I say, just as heavenly and eternal as it is. Anyone, 
by contrast, who clings to life is not prepared to lose his soul in this
 way, because he loves this fleeting age and everything to do with it. 
He will inflict loss on his soul, depriving it of true life, and he will
 lose it, surrendering it along with himself, alas, to eternal 
punishment. The all-merciful Lord mourned for such people and indicated 
how great a disaster was theirs by saying, “For what shall it profit a 
man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? Or what 
shall a man give in exchange for his soul?” (Mark 8.36-37). For neither 
his glory nor any of the other deceptive honours and delights of this 
present age, chosen by him in preference to a death which brings 
salvation, will go down with him. How could any of these things be given
 in exchange for a human soul, which is worth more than the whole world?
Even if a man could gain the whole world, brethren, it would be of no
 benefit to him because he would have lost his own soul. In reality, 
each person can only acquire an infinitely small share of this world. 
What a disaster, then, if someone loses his soul in his efforts to 
acquire this tiny share, rather than choosing to take up the sign and 
word of the Cross and to follow the giver of life. Now both the sign 
which we reverence and the word concerning it are, in fact, the Cross.
As the word and the mystery came before the sign itself, we shall 
expound them to your charity first. Or rather, Paul expounded them 
before us, Paul who boasts in the Cross, determined not to know anything
 save the Lord Jesus, and Him crucified (1 Corinthians 2.2). What does 
he say? The Cross means crucifying the flesh with its passions and 
desires (Galatians 5.24). Do you think he is referring only to the 
passions of sensual pleasure and gluttony? In that case he would not 
have written to the Corinthians, “Since there is among you strife and 
divisions are ye not carnal and walk as men?” (1 Corinthians 3.3). 
Consequently, anyone who loves glory or money, or simply wants to impose
 his own will in his eagerness to prevail, is carnal and walks as men, 
since such things are the source of divisions. As James, the Lord’s 
brother, says, “From whence come wars and fightings among you? Come they
 not hence, even of your lusts that war in your members? Ye lust and 
have not: ye fight and war” (James 4.1-2). Crucifying the flesh with its
 passions and longings means stopping all activity which is displeasing 
to God. Although our body may pull us down and exert pressure on us, we 
must still lift it up urgently to the height of the Cross. What am I 
trying to say? When the Lord was on earth He lived a life of poverty, 
and not just lived but preached poverty, saying, “Whosoever he be of you
 that forsaketh not all that he hath, he cannot be my disciple” (Luke 
14.33).
May none of you, brethren, be annoyed when you hear us announcing, in
 unadulterated form, the good and acceptable and perfect will of God, 
nor be vexed because you think these precepts are unattainable. Bear in 
mind, firtsly, that the kingdom of heaven is subject to violence, and 
the violent take it by force (Matthew 11.12). Listen to Peter, the 
leader of Christ’s apostles, who says, “Christ also suffered for us, 
leaving us an example, that we should follow his steps” (1 Peter 2.21). 
Then you should consider the fact that when someone really learns how 
much he owes the Master, and is unable to repay in full, he modestly 
offers as much as he can and freely chooses to. As for the remaining 
debt, he humbles himself before the Lord and, attracting His compassion 
through his humility, he makes up for the shortfall. If someone observes
 his thought reaching out towards riches and wealth, he must realize 
that this fleshly thought separates him from Christ crucified within 
him.
How can you begin to take this thought up to the height of the Cross?
 Having put your hope in Christ who provides for all creation and 
nurtures it, keep away from all unjust gains, and do not be too attached
 even to honest income. Put it to good use and let the poor share in it 
as much as possible. It is the same with the commandment to deny the 
body and take up our cross. Although godly people who live according to 
His will have bodies, they are not too attached to them, but make use of
 their assistance when necessary. Should the be called upon to do so, 
they are ready to part with them. If you act in this way i n respect of 
the body’s attributes and needs, even if you can do nothing more, this 
is good and pleasing to God. Do you see the thought of fornication 
forcefully stirred up within? Be aware that you have not yet crucified 
yourself. How can this be done? Flee from looking inquisitively at 
women, from unseemly familiarity with them and inappropriate 
conversation. Reduce the fuel with feeds this passion by giving up 
excessive drinking, drunkenness, eating your fill and sleeping too much.
 To the renunciation of these evils add humblemindedness, and call upon 
God with a contrite heart for help against this passion. Then you too 
will say, “I have seen the wicked in great power and filled up like the 
cedars of Lebanon. I passed him by through self-control and, lo, he was 
not: I sought him in humble prayer, but his place could not be found in 
me” (Psalm 36.35-36 LXX).
Are you troubled by the thought of the love of glory? When you are in
 meetings or councils, bring to mind the Lord’s advice on this subject 
in the Gospels. Do not try to appear superior to other when you speak. 
Practise any virtues you have in secret, looking only to God and seen 
only by Him, “and thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee 
openly” (Matthew 6.6). If, after cutting off the causes of every one of 
the passions, the thought of them still inwardly troubles you, do not be
 afraid. It will procure you crowns, since it annoys you but does not 
win you over, and is not active. It is a dead movement, conquered by 
your godly struggle.
Such is the word of the Cross (1 Corinthians 1.18). It was and is, 
therefore, a great and truly divine mystery, not only in the time of the
 prophets before it was accomplished, but also now after it has been 
fulfilled. Why is this so? On the face of it, anyone who lowers and 
humbles himself in all respects seems to be bringing dishonour on 
himself, anyone who flees carnal pleasures appears to be causing himself
 toil and grief, and anyone who gives away his possessions looks as 
though he is making himself poor. But by the power of God this poverty, 
grief and dishonour give birth to inexhaustible riches, inexpressible 
delight and eternal glory, both in this world and in the world to come. 
Paul ranks those who do not believe this, and prove their faith by their
 actions, with the lost, or with the Greeks. “We preach”, he says, 
“Christ crucified, unto the Jews a stumbling block”, because they do not
 believe in the saving passion, “and unto the Greeks foolishness”, as 
they value transitory things above all else because of their complete 
disbelief in God’s promises, “but unto them that are called, Christ the 
power of God and the wisdom of God” (1 Corinthians 1.23).
This is the wisdom and power of God: to be victorious through 
weakness, exalted through humility, rich through poverty. Not only the 
word and the mystery of the Cross are divine and to be reverenced, but 
so also is its sign. For it is a holy, saving and venerable seal, able 
to hallow and perfect all the good, marvellous and indescribably things 
which God has done for the human race. It can take away the curse and 
condemnation, destroy corruption and death, bestow eternal life and 
blessing. It is the wood of salvation, the regal sceptre, the divine 
tropy of victory over visible and invisible enemies, even though the 
heretics’ followers are insanely displeased. They have not attained to 
the apostles’s prayer that “they might be able to comprehend with all 
the saints what is the breadth, and length, and height, and depth” 
(Ephesians 3.18).  They have not understood that the Lord’s Cross 
discloses the entire dispensation of His coming in the flesh, and 
contains within it the whole mystery of this dispensation. Extending in 
all directions, it embraces everything above, below, around and between.
 The heretics abhor the sign of the King of Glory (Psalm 24.7-10), 
putting forward an excuse, in accordance with which, if they were 
reasonable, they ought to reverence the Cross along with us. The Lord 
Himself, when He wa going to ascend the Cross, openly referred to it as 
His lifting up and His glory (John 3.14-15). And He announced that when 
He came again and manifested Himself, this sign of the Son of man would 
come with power and great glory (Matthew 24.30).
The heretics say that because Christ died nailed to the Cross, they 
cannot bear to see the form of the wood on which He was put to death. 
But where was the handwriting nailed which was drawn up against us 
because of our disobedience, when our forefather stretched out his hand 
to the tree? How was it taken out of the way and obliterated, enabling 
us to return to God’s blessing? Where did Christ despoil and drive 
completely away the principalities and powers of the evil spirits, which
 had taken a hold on our nature since the time of the tree of 
disobedience? Where did He triumph over them and put them to shame, so 
that we could be set free? Where was the middle wall of partition broken
 down and our enmity towards God abolished and put to death? By what 
means were we reconciled with God and how did we hear the Good News of 
peace with Him? Surely it was on the Cross anb by means of the Cross. 
Let those who doubt listen to what the apostle writes to the Ephesians, 
“For Christ is our peace, who hath broken down the middle wall of 
partition between us; for to make in himself of twain one new man, so 
making peace; and taht he might reconcile both unto God in one body by 
the cross, having slain the enmity thereby” (Ephesians 2.14-16). To the 
Colossians he writes, “And you, being dead in your sins and the 
uncircumcision of your flesh, hath he quickened together with him, 
having forgiven you all trespasses; blotting out the handwriting of 
ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it 
out of the way, nailing it to his cross; and having spoiled 
principalities and powers, he made a show of them openly, triumphing 
over them in it” (Colossians 2.13-15).
Surely we should honour and use this divine trophy of the freedom of 
the whole human race. Its appearance alone puts the serpent, the 
originator of evil, to flight, triumphs over him and disgraces him, 
proclaiming him defeated and crushed. It glorifies and magnifies Christ,
 and displays His victory to the world. If it were really necessary to 
disregard the Cross because Christ suffered death on it, then His death 
too would be neither honourable nor salutary. So how can we have been 
baptized into His death, as the apostle tell us (Romans 6.3)? And how 
can we share in His resurrection, if we have been planted together in 
the likeness of His death (Romans 6.5)? On the other hand, if someone 
were to reverence the sign of the Cross without the Lord’s name written 
upon it, he could justy be accused of doing something incorrect. Since 
“at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and 
things in the earth, and things under the earth” (Philippians 2.10), and
 the Cross bears this venerable name. How very foolish not to bow the 
knee at Christ’s Cross!
Inclining our hearts as well as bending our knees, come ,”let us 
worship”, with David the psalmist and prophet, “at the place where His 
feet stood” (Psalm 132.7 LXX), where His all-embracing hands were 
outspread and His life-giving  body was stretched out for our sake. As 
we reverence and greet the Cross with faith, let us draw and keep the 
abundant sanctification flowing from it. Then, at the sublimely glorious
 future advent of our Lord and God and Saviour Jesus Christ, as we see 
Him come in glory, we shall rejoice and skip for joy unceasingly, having
 attained to a place on His right hand and heard the promised joyful 
words and blessing, to the glory of the Son of God crucified in the 
flesh for us.
For to Him belongs all glory, together with His Father without 
beginning and the all-holy, good and life-giving Spirit, now and for 
ever and unto the ages of ages. Amen.

 
 

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