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      John Denham Parsons

      The Non-Christian Cross

      An Enquiry Into the Origin and History of the Symbol Adopted as That the Symbol of Christianity

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      2020 OK Publishing

      EAN 4064066308865

       Preface.

       Chapter I. Was The Stauros of Jesus Cross-Shaped?

       Chapter II. The Evidence of Minucius Felix.

       Chapter III. The Evidence of the Other Fathers.

       Chapter IV. Curious Statements of Irenæus.

       Chapter V. Origin of This Pre-Christian Cross.

       Chapter VI. Origin of the Christian Cross.

       Chapter VII. The Establisher of the Church.

       Chapter VIII. Cross and Crescent.

       Chapter IX. The Coronation Orb.

       Chapter X. Roman Coins Before Constantine.

       Chapter XI. The Coins of Constantine.

       Chapter XII. Roman Coins After Constantine.

       Chapter XIII. The Monogram of Christ.

       Chapter XIV. The Cross of the Logos.

       Chapter XV. The Pre-Christian Cross in Europe.

       Chapter XVI. The Pre-Christian Cross in Asia.

       Chapter XVII. The Pre-Christian Cross in Africa.

       Chapter XVIII. Evidence of Troy.

       Chapter XIX. Evidence of Cyprus.

       Chapter XX. Miscellaneous Evidence.

       Chapter XXI. Summary.

“O CRUX, SPLENDIDIOR CUNCTIS ASTRIS, MUNDO CELEBRIS, HOMINIBUS MULTUM AMABILIS, SANCTIOR UNIVERSIS.”
BREVIARIUM ROMANUM, Festival of the Invention of the Holy Cross.

       Table of Contents

      The history of the symbol of the cross has had an attraction for the author ever since, as an enquiring youth, he found himself unable to obtain satisfactory answers to four questions concerning the same which presented themselves to his mind.

      The first of those questions was why John the Baptist, who was beheaded before Jesus was executed, and so far as we are told never had anything to do with a cross, is represented in our religious pictures as holding a cross.

      The second question was whether this curious but perhaps in itself easily explained practice had in its inception any connection with the non-Mosaic initiatory rite of baptism; which Jesus accepted as a matter of course at the hands of his cousin John, and in which the sign of the cross has for ages been the all-important feature. And it was the wonder whether there was or was not some association between the facts that the New Testament writers give no explanation whatever of the origin of baptism as an initiatory rite, that this non-Mosaic initiatory rite was in use among Sun-God worshippers long before our era, and that the Fathers admitted that the followers of the Persian conception of the Sun-God marked their initiates upon the forehead like the followers of the Christ, which finally induced the author to start a systematic enquiry into the history of the cross as a symbol.

      The third question was why, despite the fact that the instrument of execution to which Jesus was affixed can have had but one shape, almost any kind of cross is accepted as a symbol of our faith.

      The last of the four questions was why many varieties of the cross of four equal arms, which certainly was not a representation of an instrument of execution, were accepted by Christians as symbols of the Christ before any cross which could possibly have been a representation of an instrument of execution was given a place among the symbols of Christianity; while even nowadays one variety of the cross of four equal arms is the favourite symbol of the Greek Church, and both it and the other varieties enter into the ornamentation of our sacred properties and dispute the supremacy with the cross which has one of its arms longer than the other three.

      Pursuing these matters for himself, the author eventually found that even before our era the cross was venerated by many as the symbol of Life; though our works of reference seldom mention this fact, and never do it justice.

      He moreover discovered that no one has ever written a complete history of the symbol, showing the possibility that the stauros or post to which Jesus was affixed was not cross-shaped, and the certainty that, in any case, what eventually became the symbol of our faith owed some of its prestige as a Christian symbol of Victory and Life to the position it occupied in pre-Christian days.

      The author has therefore, in the hope of drawing attention to the subject, incorporated the results of his researches in the present essay.

      14, ST. DUNSTAN'S HILL,

      LONDON, E.C.

      Chapter I.

       Was The Stauros of Jesus Cross-Shaped?

       Table of Contents

      In the thousand and

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