The Asian Age

From Tree of Death to Tree of Life

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How did the cross, from being such a loathsome taboo that it could scarcely be mentioned, change into an image thought suitable viewing for all ages in public art galleries? There is no doubt about its early despicable reputation. A hundred years before the birth of Jesus, Cicero declared that ‘the very word cross should be far removed not only from the person of a Roman citizen but from his thoughts’.

It was the cross that gave rise to the word excruciati­ng. It makes me feel rather queasy to envisage the slow death by suffocatio­n of the crucified man, left without the strength to draw breath, so I was glad that Robin M. Jensen trotted fairly briskly through the forensic evidence, which includes a first-century heel bone with a nail through it.

One might think that early depictions of the crucifixio­n of Jesus would be realistic, since the reality was still familiar. Only later would visual metaphors be developed. The opposite is the case. In the first centuries, it is true, his followers did not depict Christ on the cross, even though the crucifixio­n was put at the heart of their earliest writings.

The first surviving manuscript pictures of the crucifixio­n date from the sixth century and commonly, as in the Rabbula Gospels (named after their scribe, who wrote in Syriac), Jesus is shown dressed from shoulder to toe in a sleeveless purple robe with two vertical gold stripes. This was called in Latin, the colobium. The British monarch is invested in a robe of that name after the coronation anointing. The coronation colobium is of plain linen; the purple, gold-striped colobium of pictorial crucifixes from the sixth to the tenth centuries is imperial and heretic.

The cue for the idea of Christ on the cross being, not a tortured criminal, but a royal priestly figure, long predated the adoption by Constantin­e of the cross as an emblem that guaranteed victory in his march on Rome in 312. The two sources for Constantin­e’s vision were Lactantius, one of his advisors, who describes the sign seen in a dream as a Chi-Rho (XP, from the first Greek letters of the name of Christ), and Eusebius, his biographer, who says he saw a cross of light in the sky. What Constantin­e ordered to be made as his standard was a victory was exploited by the Latin poet Venantius Fortunatus in his hymn ‘Vexilla Regis’. He wrote it for his friend and patron Queen Radegund of the Franks, who founded a monastery at Poitiers to house the gift, in about the year 569, of a relic of the cross from the Emperor Justin II. (He gave a similar relic to Pope John III, the reliquary for which, in the shape of a gemmed cross, is displayed in the Vatican. The king of the Visigoths and the queen of the Lombards soon got a slice too; it helped the barbarians feel less barbarian.) ‘The banners of the king go forth: / The mystery of the cross shine out, / By which the maker of our flesh / In flesh upon a gibbet hung,’ goes this song, which is still sung all round the world in the days before Easter.

By Venantius’ time, the link was establishe­d, more by way of poetic exegesis than as a matter of history, between the tree of the cross and the tree of Eden by which, through disobedien­ce, Adam and Eve fell, precipitat­ing, in the fullness of time, the incarnatio­n of God as man to save their offspring. Jesus was seen as the second Adam, so it was reckoned that Golgotha, meaning the ‘Place of the Skull’, where Jesus died, had been the site of Adam’s grave, and the skull (often depicted in scenes of the crucifixio­n) was Adam’s own. Moreover, the story went, the tree from which the cross was hewn had grown from a cutting of the Edenic tree.

This tale was picked up by the medieval bestseller the Golden Legend (later printed by Caxton), ensuring its universal propagatio­n in the West. In all this, Robin M. Jensen, a professor at Notre Dame, is an authoritat­ive, clear and enjoyable guide, especially to the unfamiliar world of late antiquity. Her use of pictures is particular­ly informativ­e. She must be fairly tired of being confused with Robin E. Jensen, a professor at Utah and the author of Dirty Words: The Rhetoric of Public Sex Education. Perhaps they both are.

Professor Jensen, since she is factual and focused, does not mention it, but an analogue of the connection between the cross and the tree of knowledge is to be found in The Magician’s Nephew by C. S. Lewis. In his first book in the series, the author had (thanks to a sort of dream) put an anachronis­tic lamp-post in Narnia. By way of a posterior onomastic explanatio­n, he attributes its presence in Lantern Waste to the wicked Empress Jadis having wrenched the crossbar off a lamp-post in Edwardian London and thrown it angrily at Aslan in Narnia, only for it to grow, in the fertile ground of the new world, into its parent post.About 1,300 years before Lewis, an unknown author narrated the history of the cross in its own words. The Dream of the Rood, as it is known, mostly to unwilling undergradu­ates, was preserved by chance in a manuscript that ended up in Italy. — By arrangemen­t with the Spectator

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