A High-Tech Amulet or “Why Do We Wear a Cross around Our Neck?”

Hotel staff and residents of resort areas often distinguish our tourists at first sight, notably, not by our behavior, cultural standards, language knowledge or the number of tips. Those differences are long gone. Our tourists (as well as Ukrainians and Belarusians) overwhelmingly wear crosses. The people wearing them are not necessarily believers or church-goers. Many of them represent the popular “God-is-in-the-soul”* viewpoint, while their common motivation (especially during flights) is the hope of a certain “safety net from above”. That reminds me of the question frequently asked by children in school: “Why do we wear a cross?” When I think of the response, I often recall a story from my first parish.

One woman came to confession regularly. She was a mid-ranking leader, a wife, and a mother. Everything was wonderful with her on the outside. She had, however, one problem. Nobody would get along with her. At work she was suffering from the never-ending employee turnover, her children always talked back to her while her relations with her husband were a series of crises.  As is often the case, the confession went something like this: “I confess, father, I lose my temper often. It’s for different reasons with different people, but it happens all the time…”  Once I ran out of patience and told her: “Buy a voice recorder with a good battery and plenty of memory.”

– Why???

– Just do it!

So she did.  When she brought it, I turned it on, put it on her neck, and said:

– Consider this a Holter monitor. Turn it on when you wake up and shut it off before you go to bed. She came back in a week, looking kind of pensive.

– Father, I haven’t had a single fight in a whole week! Everyone gives me strange looks and asks if I’m all right.

– What happened? Did you turn on the recorder?

– Yes. When I turned it on, I thought that you would be listening to me. So I chose words and tone carefully so that I would not have to blush in front of you later. And… Thank you!

This is why we bear the cross on ourselves. We do it to remember – Whose we are, Who looks at us and listens to us. And most importantly, in front of Whom we will have to blush if we still can.


*”God is in the soul” is a popular saying widely spread among people who, although baptized in Orthodoxy (mostly as babies), do not practice their faith in the customary form.

Translated by The Catalogue of Good Deeds
Source: https://blog.predanie.ru/article/o-vysokotehnologichnom-amulete-ili-zachem-my-nosim-krest-na-shee/

Avatar photo

About the author


Leave a Reply to Erik Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Comments

  1. Thank you for sharing this. I have a beautifully carved pear wood Orthodox cross I wear. It is large and the weight reminds me it is there. Which reminds to watch my own quite outrageous temper. Many times I fail. And when I fail I take off my cross and put it on the shelf. The absence of its weight makes me feel shamed. And in that shame I am reminded that I failed the Cross and Christ for that moment/hour/day. I shall try again next day. Gospodi pomiluj

  2. Thank you. I wear a Miraculous Medal with the image of Mary and from now on I will be aware that she is listening. God bless.
    Erik

Know everything about Orthodoxy? We can tell you a bit more!

Subscribe for our weekly newsletter not to miss the most interesting articles on our blog.

Spelling error report

The following text will be sent to our editors: