May 3 – Finding of the Holy Cross
The Vision of Saint Helena by Paolo Veronese
In the year 326 the mother of Constantine, Helena,
then about 80 years old, having journeyed to Jerusalem, undertook to
rid the Holy Sepulchre of the mound of earth heaped upon and around it,
and to destroy the pagan buildings that profaned its site. Some
revelations which she had received gave her confidence that she would
discover the Saviour’s Tomb and His Cross. The work was carried on
diligently, with the co-operation of St. Macarius, bishop of the city.
The Jews had hidden the Cross in a ditch or well, and covered it over
with stones, so that the faithful might not come and venerate it. Only a
chosen few among the Jews knew the exact spot where it had been hidden,
and one of them, named Judas, touched by Divine inspiration, pointed it
out to the excavators, for which act he was highly praised by St.
Helena. Judas afterwards became a Christian saint, and is honoured under
the name of Cyriacus.
Finding the True Cross Painted by Agnolo Gaddi
During the excavation three crosses were found, but because the titulus
was detached from the Cross of Christ, there was no means of
identifying it. Following an inspiration from on high, Macarius caused
the three crosses to be carried, one after the other, to the bedside of a
worthy woman who was at the point of death. The touch of the other two
was of no avail; but on touching that upon which Christ had died the
woman got suddenly well again. From a letter of St. Paulinus to Severus
inserted in the Breviary of Paris it would appear that St. Helena.
herself had sought by means of a miracle to discover which was the True
Cross and that she caused a man already dead and buried to be carried to
the spot, whereupon, by contact with the third cross, he came to life.
From yet another tradition, related by St.Ambrose, it would seem that
the titulus, or inscription, had remained fastened to the Cross.
A
fter the happy discovery, St. Helena and Constantine erected a magnificent basilica over the Holy Sepulchre,
and that is the reason why the church bore the name of St.
Constantinus. The precise spot of the finding was covered by the atrium
of the basilica, and there the Cross was set up in an oratory, as
appears in the restoration executed by de Vogüé. When this noble
basilica had been destroyed by the infidels, Arculfus, in the seventh
century, enumerated four buildings upon the Holy Places around Golgotha,
and one of them was the “Church of the Invention” or “of the Finding”.
This church was attributed by him and by topographers of later times to
Constantine. The Frankish monks of Mount Olivet, writing to Leo III,
style it St. Constantinus. Perhaps the oratory built by Constantine
suffered less at the hands of the Persians than the other buildings, and
so could still retain the name and style of Martyrium Constantinianum. (See De Rossi, Bull. d’ arch. crist., 1865, 88.)
(cfr. Catholic Encyclopedia: Cross and Crucifix)
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