<h2 id="id00177">THE ORIGIN OF THE CROSS</h2>
<p id="id00178" style="margin-top: 3em">Only the uninformed, of whom, we regret to say, there are a great
many, and who are the main support of the old religions, still believe
that the cross originated with Christianity. Like the dogmas of the
Trinity, the virgin birth, and the resurrection, the sign of the cross
or the cross as an emblem or a symbol was borrowed from the more
ancient faiths of Asia. Perhaps one of the most important discoveries
which primitive man felt obliged never to be ungrateful enough to
forget, was the production of fire by the friction of two sticks
placed across each other in the form of a cross. As early as the stone
age we find the cross carved on monuments which have been dug out of
the earth and which can be seen in the museums of Europe. On the coins
of later generations as well as on the altars of prehistoric times we
find the "sacred" symbol of the cross. The dead in ancient cemeteries
slept under the cross as they do in our day in Catholic churchyards.</p>
<p id="id00179">[Illustration: House of Goodness, with Cross. Egyptian, 2000 B. C.]</p>
<p id="id00180">In ancient Egypt, as in modern China, India, Corea, the cross is
venerated by the masses as a charm of great power. In the Musee
Guimet, in Paris, we have seen specimens of pre-Christian crosses. In
the Louvre Museum one of the "heathen" gods carries a cross on his
head. During his second journey to New Zealand, Cook was surprised to
find the natives marking the graves of their dead with the cross. We
saw, in the Museum of St. Germain, an ancient divinity of Gaul, before
the conquest of the country by Julius Caesar, wearing a garment on
which was woven a cross. In the same museum an ancient altar of Gaul
under Paganism, had a cross carved upon it. That the cross was not
adopted by the followers of Jesus until a later date may be inferred
from the silence of the earlier gospels, Matthew, Mark and Luke, on
the details of the crucifixion, which is more fully developed in the
later gospel of John. The first three evangelists say nothing about
the nails or the blood, and give the impression that he was hanged.
Writing of the two thieves who were sentenced to receive the same
punishment, Luke says, "One of the malefactors that was <i>hanged</i> with
him." The idea of a bleeding Christ, such as we see on crosses in
Catholic churches, is not present in these earlier descriptions of the
crucifixion; the Christians of the time of Origin were called "the
followers of the god who was hanged." In the fourth gospel we see the
beginnings of the legend of the cross, of Jesus carrying or falling
under the weight of the cross, of the nail prints in his hands and
feet, of the spear drawing the blood from his side and smearing his
body. Of all this, the first three evangelists are quite ignorant.</p>
<p id="id00181">[Illustration: Pagan Priest of Herculaneum Wearing the Cross.]</p>
<p id="id00182">[Illustration: Cross of the Chinese Emperor Fou-Hi,2953 Years Before<br/>
Christ.]<br/></p>
<p id="id00183">[Illustration: Discovered in Newgrange, Ireland. An Ancient Pagan<br/>
Cross.]<br/></p>
<p id="id00184">Let it be further noted that it was not until eight hundred years
after the supposed crucifixion that Jesus is seen in the form of a
human being on the cross. Not in any of the paintings on the ancient
catacombs is found a crucified Christ. The earliest cross bearing a
human being is of the eighth century. For a long time a lamb with a
cross, or on a cross, was the Christian symbol, and it is a lamb which
we see entombed in the "holy sepulchre." In more than one mosaic of
early Christian times, it is not Jesus, but a lamb, which is bleeding
for the salvation of the world. How a lamb came to play so important a
role in Christianity is variously explained. The similarity between
the name of the Hindu god, <i>Agni</i> and the meaning of the same word in
Latin, which is a lamb, is one theory. Another is that a ram, one of
the signs of the zodiac, often confounded by the ancients with a lamb,
is the origin of the popular reverence for the lamb as a symbol—a
reverence which all religions based on sun-worship shared. The lamb in
Christianity takes away the sins of the people, just as the paschal
lamb did in the Old Testament, and earlier still, just as it did in
Babylonia.</p>
<p id="id00185">[Illustration: Used by a Priest of Bacchus, Showing the Cross.]</p>
<p id="id00186">[Illustration: Engraving of the XI Century.]</p>
<p id="id00187">[Illustration: Lamb on Cross.]</p>
<p id="id00188">[Illustration: From a Picture in the Church of Genest. A Lamb Carrying
the Cross.]</p>
<p id="id00189">[Illustration: The Lamb and the Cross, IX Century.]</p>
<p id="id00190">To the same effect is the following letter of the bishop of Mende, in
France, bearing date of the year 800 A. D.: "Because the darkness has
disappeared, and because also Christ is a real man, Pope Adrian
commands us to paint him under the form of a man. The lamb of God must
not any longer be painted on a cross, but after a human form has been
placed on the cross, there is no objection to have a lamb also
represented with it, either at the foot of the cross or on the
opposite side." [Footnote: Translated from the French of Didron.
Quoted by Malvert.] We leave it to our readers to draw the necessary
conclusions from the above letter. How did a lamb hold its place on
the cross for eight hundred years? If Jesus was really crucified, and
that fact was a matter of history, why did it take eight hundred years
for a Christian bishop to write, "now that Christ is a real man,"
etc.? Today, it would be considered a blasphemy to place a lamb on a
cross.</p>
<p id="id00191">On the tombstones of Christians of the fourth century are pictures
representing, not Jesus, but a lamb, working the miracles mentioned in
the gospels, such as multiplying the loaves and fishes, and raising
Lazarus from the dead.</p>
<p id="id00192">[Illustration: Mosaic of St. Praxedes, V Century, Showing the Lamb<br/>
Christ.]<br/></p>
<p id="id00193">[Illustration: The Lamb Slowly Becoming Human.]</p>
<p id="id00194">[Illustration: The Lamb Multiplying the Loaves and Fishes, IV Century<br/>
Sarcophagus.]<br/></p>
<p id="id00195">The first representations of a human form on the cross differ
considerably from those which prevail at the present time.</p>
<p id="id00196">[Illustration: The Lamb Resurrecting Lazarus, IV Century Sarcophagus.]</p>
<p id="id00197">While the figure on the modern cross is almost naked, those on the
earlier ones are clothed and completely covered. Wearing a flowing
tunic, Jesus is standing straight against the cross with his arms
outstretched, as though in the act of delivering an address.
Frequently, at his feet, on the cross, there is still painted the
figure of a lamb, which by and by, he is going to replace altogether.
Gradually the robe disappears from the crucified one, until we see him
crucified, as in the adjoining picture, with hardly any clothes on,
and wearing an expression of great agony.</p>
<p id="id00198">[Illustration: Modern Christ.]</p>
<p id="id00199" style="margin-top: 4em">[Illustration: Christ and the Twelve Apostles, Carrying Swastikas and<br/>
Solar Discs Instead of the Cross. Sarcophagus, Milan.]<br/></p>
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