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Humility and the Holy Cross

The Cross of Christ, the Measure of the WorldIn June I had my right hip replaced.  Twenty years of running eroded the cartilage in the joint and when the pain became intolerable I elected to go under the knife.  Parish elders said, “You’re too young to have hip surgery.” (I’m 43.)  In the words of Indiana Jones: “It’s not the years, it’s the mileage.”  Recovery was slow and painful but by the third week I was able to celebrate Mass.  But I couldn’t genuflect and I missed that because the genuflections of the priest are integral to the Mass.  In my case a profound bow sufficed.

Genuflection is one of many symbols of Catholicism.  As Catholics we genuflect in Church in reverence for the true presence of Jesus Christ in the Eucharist.  Genuflection is a sign of humility in imitation of our Lord, who humbled himself to follow God’s plan.  When we enter God’s house we genuflect because we respect the glory of Christ who was lifted on high for our salvation.

In his letter to the Philippians Saint Paul writes that Jesus humbled himself by assenting to his death on the cross and God exalted him at his right hand in heaven.  “Though he was in the form of God, Jesus did not regard equality with God as something to be grasped.  Rather, he emptied himself, taking the form of a slave and coming in human likeness.”

Adam strove to obtain the divinity of God and he fell.  Jesus chose not to lord his divinity over humanity and for that he was glorified.  For the Israelites the sight of the serpent on the pole was a symbol of healing and regeneration, a means to humble themselves before God.  Were they to make it through their desert journey they needed to submit to the Lord.

The primary symbol of  Catholicism is the Cross, celebrated in a special way on the Feast of the Holy Cross, which this year falls on the 24th Sunday or Ordinary Time.  Public veneration of the Cross dates to the fourth century when Saint Helena, mother of the Emperor Constantine, discovered it in Jerusalem.  The feast commemorates the rescue of the Cross from the Persians in the 7th Century.  The Church celebrates the triumph of the Cross because it is the symbol of salvation, the sign of God’s saving power that helped the wilderness generation (Nm 21:4b-9).

Genuflection before the Tabernacle displays reverence for Christ’s divinity.  “Just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the desert, the Son of Man must be lifted up, so that everyone who believes in him may have eternal life.”  In genuflecting we bend our knees to confess that “Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father.”

The key word in Philippians that Paul uses is kenosis, “self-emptying.”  “[Jesus] emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, and found human in appearance, humbled himself and become obedient unto death—death on a cross!”

Self-emptying prepares us to receive the author of life who gives us his Body and his Blood, the result of his crucifixion.  The saints of the Church emptied themselves like Christ and are exalted in the Litany of Saints.  Paul’s case was especially acute because everything he did he did for love and in imitation of “Christ and him crucified.”

During the Mass the priest genuflects five times: at the entrance, twice during the consecration when the body and blood of Jesus are elevated, before he holds aloft both species and repeats the words of the Baptist, “Behold the Lamb of God,” and at the recession.  Five genuflections represent the five wounds of Christ borne by the priest who acts in persona Christi.

After my surgery several weeks passed before I was able to genuflect without my joint locking up.  Still, I was reminded daily of the wounds of Christ.  Isaiah, speaking on God’s behalf, said, “To me every knee shall bend, by me every tongue shall swear, saying ‘Only in the Lord are just deeds and power’.”  Understanding Jesus’s crucifixion is essential to receiving the spiritual and physical healing he provides.  All it takes is the humble gesture of bending the knee before the Lord our maker.


Father Cordani was ordained to the priesthood in 2011. He holds an MFA in Writing from the Vermont College of Fine Arts and an MDiv from Pope Saint John XXIII National Seminary. He has written for Our Sunday Visitor, the National Catholic Register, and Columbia Magazine. Follow him on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/tucker.cordani and Twitter @tuckercordani


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