The Sign of the Cross
The cross was used by Pagans long before the Messiah was put to death on Calvary.The cross is a symbol of the Babylonian Sun god and was also seen on the coins of Julius Caesar 100-40 BC. The cross was the emblem of Tammuz known as the mistletoe or Branch.
It is doubtful if Christ even died on the kind of cross commonly known. It is more likely that he was crucified on a stake - an upright pole or tree with its branches lopped off. But we will not argue about the type of cross on which the Messiah died; the point is, we Christians should not venerate the cross - any cross. Nor should we have crosses in our church buildings, or wear crosses around our necks or make signs of the cross on people's foreheads.
The following stunning comments are taken from pages 197-199 of
Alexander Hyslop's book
THE TWO BABYLONS ISBN 0-7136 047 0 Published by S.W.Partridge & Co, 4,5,6 Soho Square, London, England.
THE TWO BABYLONS ISBN 0-7136 047 0 Published by S.W.Partridge & Co, 4,5,6 Soho Square, London, England.
“There is yet one more symbol of the Romish
worship to be noticed, and that is the sign of the cross.
In the Papal system, as is well known, the sign of the cross
and the image of the cross are all in all. No prayer can
be said, no worship engaged in, without the frequent use of the
sign of the cross. The cross is looked upon as the
grand charm, as the great refuge in every season of
danger, in every hour of temptation as the infallible preservative
from all the powers of darkness. The cross is adored with all the
homage due only to the Most High; and for anyone to call it,
in the hearing of a genuine Romanist, by the Scriptural term,
‘the accursed tree,’ is a mortal offence.
To say that such superstitious feelings for the sign of the cross,
such worship as Rome pays to a wooden or metal cross, ever grew
out of the saying of Paul,
That mystic Tau was marked in baptism on the foreheads
of those initiated in the Mysteries, and was used in every
variety of way as a most sacred symbol ... The mystic Tau,
as a symbol of the great divinity, was called ‘the sign of
life;’ it was used as an amulet over the heart; it was marked
on the official garments of the priests, as on the official garments of the
priests of Rome; it was born by kings in their hand, as a token of their
dignity or divinely-conferred authority. The Vestal virgins of Pagan
Rome wore it suspended from their necklaces, as the nuns do now.
The Egyptians did the same, and many of the barbarous nations
with whom they had intercourse, as the Egyptian monuments bear witness.
In reference to the adorning of some of these tribes, Wilkinson
thus writes: ‘The girdle was sometimes highly ornamented;
men as well as women wore earings; and they frequently had a small cross
suspended to a necklace, or to the collar of their dress...’
There is hardly a Pagan tribe where the cross has not been found.
The cross was worshipped by the Pagan Celts long before the incarnation
and death of Christ.
“It is a fact” says Maurice,
“no less remarkable than well attested, that the
Druids in their groves were accustomed to select the most
stately and beautiful tree as an emblem of the Deity they adored,
and having cut the side branches, they affixed two of the largest of
them to the highest part of the trunk, in such a manner that those
branches extended on each side like the arms of a man, and,
together with the body presented the appearance of a HUGE
CROSS, and on the bark in several places, was inscribed the
letter Thau.” It was worshipped in Mexico
for ages before the Roman Catholic missionaries set foot there,
large stone crosses being erected, probably to the ‘god
of rain.’ The cross thus widely worshipped, or regarded
as a sacred emblem, was the unequivocal symbol of Bacchus, the
Babylonian Messiah, for he was represented with a head-band covered
with crosses.” (end of quote - emphasis mine throughout)
In view of all these amazing facts, The Bible
advises all Christians to stop wearing or venerating the cross
on which our Saviour was crucified. Who in their right mind would
venerate a murder weapon used to kill a loved one? It is the same
with the cross. We greatly rejoice that our Saviour died to bring
about our salvation; but that ‘instrument of torture,’
which is what the cross was, is not something Christians should venerate.
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