I read about the Catholic Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa blessing the city of Jerusalem with a relic of the True Cross in response to his having been prevented from celebrating Palm Sunday mass at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre yesterday afer having done something along the same lines myself. At the end of a mass protest against the Israeli-owned Rafael weapons factory on Scotswood Road, there was a moment of silence, after which attendees of the demonstration were invited to place daffodils we'd been given in the fence to remember the children killed in Palestine by that factory's products. As I was still carrying the palm cross I'd picked up at the church service I'd been to earlier in the day, it seemed an appropriate gesture to put that in the fence as well. So I did.
Yeah, I've started going to church again. Trust me, no-one is more surprised or embarrassed by this development than I, and this blog is not going to turn into an effort at evangelism, an activity I am highly suspicious of in most of its forms. You really don't need to tell people about Jesus, folks: He's a foundational figure in Western culture. He's in paintings. We say His name when we jam our fingers in the door. To paraphrase Hank Hill, you're not saving someone's soul when you tell them a very well-worn story about the crucifixion like it's news, you're just making Christianity more cringe. But I did think it might be worth getting some of my thoughts about the cross down here, partly because a particular attitude to the cross among certain types of soi-disant 'Christian' is somewhat responsible for my recent transformation into some kind of church lady, and partly because, with Good Friday coming up, I want to take issue with those same crucicentralist attitudes more generally.
Some of you may not be interested in reading a long ramble about the cross, and if you're one of those I'll give you the nut graf here and let you get on with your day. The German liberation theologian Dorothee Sölle, who coined the term 'Christofascism', wrote that adherents to that particular perversion 'know the cross only as a magical symbol of what Jesus has done for us, not as a sign of the poor man who was tortured to death as a political criminal...a betrayal of the disappointed, a miracle weapon in the service of the mighty'. And the argument I'm going to make here, such as it is, is that, especially in times like our own, we really ought to be focusing more on Jesus the tortured political criminal than Christ Pantocrator, and that should inform the way we look at the cross. Or, to put it another way, we have to regard any image of the crucifixion as being fundamentally substitutable with this image:
And if you want, you can stop reading here.
Sölle's words struck me because during the recent street activism I've been doing defending those housed in Newcastle's New Bridge Hotel against the fascist thugs who come out every weekend to hurl abuse at them, one thing I've noticed is that some people on the fascist side really do wave the cross about like it's a magic wand. They seem to believe that the crucifix has the same effect on Muslims, socialists and queer & trans folk that it has on vampires: that if they only angle it just so, and say the correct form of words (fascists are big on that phrase, 'form of words', have you noticed? Nigel Farage often uses it in his non-apologies. If you think about it for a while, it tells you something about them), the Power Of Christ Will Compel Us to take up our placards and banners and walk, giving the fash an unbarred run-up right to the hotel door. To me, this kind of carry-on is performative at best and at worst, frankly, a form of idolatry. Because if you're waving the cross around as a totem, then your engagement with the act it represents is fundamentally shallow and devoid of meaning.
So I decided to start setting some of these characters straight. The admonishing of sinners is, after all, one of the seven spiritual works of mercy. And one way in which I did this was by making and holding a placard reading MATTHEW 25:35 ('When I was hungry, you gave me something to eat, when I was thirsty, you gave me something to drink, when I was a stranger you welcomed me in.'). Now, initially, when I started using this reference, it was just as a kind of theological gotcha. But the more I actually looked at and thought about the particular chapter it comes from, the more I came to see it as central to Christianity itself - as the core ethical challenge which the teaching and example of Jesus boils down to.
So as a quick summary - Matthew 25 is the chapter in which Jesus outlines the parable of the Sheep and the Goats. You probably already know this, but basically the idea is that at the end of time, on the Day of Judgement, Jesus is going to call everyone who ever lived in for a meeting and divide people into two groups based on their conduct in life. He duly does this, and when people in each group ask why he's put them there, he says it's based on whether they were nice to him or not. And people in both groups point out, not unreasonably, that they haven't actually either done or refused to do anything nice for Jesus himself, at which point he pulls a substitution move, pointing out that 'whatever you did (or did not do - AJ) for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did (or did not &c)for me'.
And this is actually worth thinking about, this interchangeability Jesus insists on between Himself, as Son of God, and the least of us. It's something I think a lot of us pay lip service to, but actually think about it. What Jesus is asking us to do is to treat people we regard as the absolute lowest of the low, the most abject, outcast people, with the same love and reverence we treat, or would like to think we treat, Him with.
I actually think this is the hardest possible thing to believe in the Bible. Genuinely. It's comparatively easy to believe all the miraculous stuff, because obviously the Son of God can work miracles, right? That comes with the territory. He doesn't have to be constrained by the laws of biology or thermodynamics - He has a note from His Dad. But to actually believe, and to act on the belief, that the lowest drug addict on the street putting their hand out to you for a quid, or the most annoying dickhead on the bus watching TikTok on they damn phone, is as holy and divine and worthy of your time as the Messiah, that's fucking impossible (which, I think, is why the only prayer Jesus specifically directs people to pray in the gospels includes a line where we admit we fucked up and apologise for it). But just because it is impossible, that doesn't mean we shouldn't strive to do it as much as we possibly can.
And the thing is: that interchangeability of Jesus with the lowest of the low should also govern how we look at the crucifixion, and not just because that event, allowing Himself to be tortured to death over the course of a day to save every human being who ever has or ever will live - yes, including those who blasted rope to Waluigi hentai - represents the ne plus ultra of this universal compassion Jesus is trying to teach.
![]() |
| A theological text of profound importance |
But because, as I've mentioned before here, crucifixion was a punishment the Roman Empire reserved for the lowest of the low, and to be crucified was not just mean to be as painful as possible, but as humiliating as possible. Imagine what a crucified body smelled like, after bleeding and baking for hours in the Middle Eastern sun. Imagine the pain and strain on the joints of the body. Imagine how weak you would feel, forced to adopt an unnatural position and knowing that the only thing that holds you up is the very torturing frame that you're pinned to. Imagine the special humiliation of being raised up, literally looking down on everyone before you, but all of those people looking back up at you and jeering. Because you're filth. You're scum. You're the lowest form of life. You must be - because you're up there on a cross.
And I do mean a and not the cross. Because what I'm trying to do here is not the traditional Christian move of focusing in a nigh-pornographic way on the sufferings of Christ. Mel Gibson has you covered if that's what you want. I want you to imagine specifically what crucifixion felt like to someone who wasn't the Messiah. To someone who was just a schmuck who got caught. And there were a lot of those schmucks: at least 300,000, according to conservative estimates, but maybe as many as two million. After Spartacus' revolt, the Emperor Crassus ordered six thousand of the former gladiator's supporters to be crucified. Kinda puts all those RETVRN memes into some kind of perspective, huh?
Every single one of those people suffered and was humiliated just as much as Jesus, and when we treat the cross as some kind of wand and Jesus as some kind of superhero, we do those people, and Christ Himself, a disservice. Because if you accept the challenge of compassion represented by Matthew 25 - and it's my contention that, as a Christian, you really should - then you have to see every single one of those people as being as worthy of love, honour and empathy as Christ. And when you do that, something becomes very clear.
The important thing about the crucifixion is not that it was a horrible thing to do to the Son of God.
The important thing is that it was a horrible thing to do to anyone.

















.jpg)



