Exaltation of the Cross
Homily 9/14/25

Homily for the Exaltation of the Cross
Numbers 21:4b – 9; Philippians 2:6 – 11; John 3:13 – 17
The feast of the Exaltation of the Cross is tied to St. Helena, the mother of Constantine. She was a devout Christian who went to Jerusalem in the 4th Century. There was a pagan temple built over the place of Jesus’ death and burial. Helena tore down the temple and built The Basilica of the Holy Sepulcher. In the excavation for that church, legend has it, three crosses were found. A woman who was very sick was healed when she touched one of the crosses so that was identified as the cross of Jesus. The Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross was put on the liturgical calendar on the day of the Basilica’s dedication in the 6th century.
The Basilica of the Holy Sepulcher still stands today. The church has divided ownership. Three denominations claim it as their own. The Armenian Apostolic Church, the Greek Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church. The irony is that this holiest of all Christian sites is a place of much division. The three churches who have custody do not get along. They have been at odds over repair and decoration of the church
As we know, the cross used to be nothing more than an instrument of torture and death. The Romans used it to punish those they considered criminals, to strike fear in the hearts of those who might dare challenge their so-called peace. It was the cruelest form of execution.
Everything changed the day Jesus was crucified. Once he died upon the cross, what was once merely an instrument of Roman punishment became in Christ the symbol of humans’ salvation from pain and death. It became an instrument of divine mercy, a symbol of love, and above all, our hope for God’s total deliverance at the end of time. The Exaltation of the Holy Cross expresses the paradox of Christian faith. Christ’s death and resurrection assure us that death and evil will never have the last word, that God’s love is everlasting and therefore, what God loves is everlasting.
In Christ, the cross now tells not a human story of oppressive power and dehumanizing punishment, but the divine story of redemption. In the cross, Jesus reveals the very heart of God. He shows us how precious each of us is to the Father, and how far God is willing to go for our salvation: “For God so loved that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him might not perish but might have eternal life.” On the cross, Christ proves God’s love for us and answers the deepest questions of human life. God alone is the ultimate purpose of our existence.
The cross teaches us that it is better to give than to receive. As Jesus teaches, unless the grain of wheat falls and dies, it bears no fruit. The cross teaches us that a life lived for others is the fullest life. That death is not a calamity when it crowns a selfless life of charity and service. It teaches us the meaning and power of humility. Jesus embraced the cross in humility as an example for us. And He emptied himself for our sake to model for us what it means to empty ourselves for the sake of others.
The cross reminds us to prepare for our impending death by appreciating the temporality of life and the emptiness of a life lived outside the purpose of God. The cross doesn’t just urge us to be good as individuals; it inspires us to work together with other good people for the common good. After all, one of the reasons Jesus climbed the cross was to draw all humanity in unity unto himself.
The cross compels us toward justice, compassion, and solidarity with all those who suffer. It challenges us to open our eyes to the plight of the poor, the hungry, the sick, and the oppressed. It warns us not to rest until there is justice for all, to resist the constant temptation to participate in selfishness, but to transform the vicious circle of life into a circle of grace and mercy.
As we celebrate the Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross, my heart goes out to the victims of the recent shooting at the Annunciation Church and School in Minnesota and all those lost in tragic recent events due to hatred. As Pope Francis reminds us: “The Way of the Cross alone defeats sin, evil, and death, for it leads to the radiant light of Christ’s resurrection and opens the horizons of a new and fuller life. It is the way of hope, the way of the future. Those who take up this way with generosity and faith give hope and a future to humanity.”
The cross is our message and our hope. May we, on this feast day, embrace it anew. Please take time to fix your eyes on the cross and respond to Jesus’s ultimate sacrifice.
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