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Appendix 2 The Bleeding Cross
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Appendix 2

The Bleeding Cross

One of the most important attractions for pilgrims and tourists, who

visit the Mount of St. Thomas, is the so-called Bleeding Cross39,

which adorns the wall behind the altar of the church on the Mount.

It is a great stone in which a cross has been carved, of a form and

shape which is not known in Europe. It has been named as “the

cross of Thomas” or “the Persian Cross”.

According to Indian tradition it was made by St. Thomas himself.

This is in accordance with the view that Thomas was a carpenter,

a stonemason or simply a builder by trade, as we found it stated

earlier in the Acts of Thomas. To carve out and set up such a cross

would have been a delightful pastime for Thomas, when he chose

and laid out a place for the faithful to come and worship. Similar

crosses are found in several places where Thomas is said to have

preached, as in Socotra and Kerala.

In Christian tradition, the cross once a sign of cruel punishment had

become a symbol of redemption thanks to Jesus’ crucifixion and

death on it. The cross has become an important element in our

Liturgy. And St. Thomas who was quite aware of the suffering and

death of Jesus on the cross knew its value for Christian worship.

It is still said of the cross kept in the main altar of the church in

St. Thomas Mount, that he was assassinated as he was kneeling

before it in deep prayer and that his blood poured out over it. A

monument came up in the place where the cross was found. And

the Portuguese who found it in its present site laid the foundations

of for a new church around it in 1547.

Let us follow the report made by Bishop Frei Andre de Santos

Maria of Cochin, under whose jurisdiction the territory of Mylapore

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once had been, before it became a separate diocese: “This stone is

as big as a mill-stone and was lying with the cross carved on it

turned down, and the reverse upwards. As the whole appearance

of the stone on the reverse was rough and unpolished, it looked just

a rough stone lying about. Those who were digging the foundations

were about to leave it there without taking much notice of it. But

moved by God, they turned it face upwards and noticed the

beautiful cross carved on it with an inscription around it. There was

a streak of blood on one side of the cross, and the blood looked to

be so fresh, as if it had been shed at that very moment. In the

course of time the blood went on disappearing, but the cross

continued to exude water as if like a sweat and people have been

wiping it away. Even now the cross has traces of what had once

been there, not withstanding that already fifty years had elapsed

since the stone was discovered and placed there on the altar”.

The miraculous sweating of the stone is said to have taken place

for the first time during a Mass on 18th December, 1558, the feast

of the Expectation of our Lady. It occurred at the singing of the

Gospel. After that the sweating took place every year, then every

two or three years, and then after a long period. The last sweating

took place in 1704. The stone took on a dark colour, and gave off

so much water that handkerchiefs could be moistened with it. For

this and other reasons it was given the Latin name Crux Mirabilis,

the miraculous cross.

Already then several Protestants seem to have challenged the

veracity of the miracle of the sweating cross. Fr. Tachard, S.J.,

wrote in 1711: “Several Protestants, not being able to deny what

they saw with their own eyes, examined the altar and its

surroundings within and without. They even climbed on the top of

the church on that side and examined it carefully to see if there was

any trickery by which the credulity of the people was being

imposed upon them. But after much useless search they were

139

forced to admit that there was nothing normal in that event, but that

it was something divine and extraordinary. They were certain of

what they saw but they were not converted”60.

Can this sweating stone have a natural explanation? At a time when

even the miracles narrated in the Gospels are critically evaluated,

it is good that this miracle too is respectfully examined further. The

matter grows even more mysterious if we turn our attention to the

inscription on the stone. The inscription is in very ancient characters

which no one can decipher. The king of Portugal seems to have

pressed for someone to be found who could do so. Finally an old

Brahmin was discovered, who was prepared to make an attempt.

At first he refused to go up to the altar to read the inscription, but

at length he yielded to the pressure put upon him. He made a fine

rigmarole of it! Each sign was, so he claimed, supposed to

represent ten, fifteen or twenty words, as the hieroglyphs of the

Egyptians taught. His translation is said to have read thus:

In the time of the law of Sagamo, a man of God, Thomas, was sent

to this part of the world by the son of God, whose pupil he was,

to bring the knowledge of God to the people. He built a temple

there, performed miracles, and was finally martyred by a lance,

thrown by a Brahmin when he was on his knees in prayer. The

cross was coloured by the blood of the saint, as a memory of him61.

It is very doubtful if the Brahmin really gave such a translation,

which is also in conflict with the Indian tradition chat Thomas

himself made the cross and the inscription on it. In any case, before

the translation reached Europe, it had already undergone so many

changes that we can no longer recognize this reading in it. In 1667

Athanasius Kircher gave a version, attributed to the Brahmin,

which differs completely from the translation which we have cited

earlier.

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There has been some further study made on the inscription on the

cross on St. Thomas Mount; studies have also been comparing this

cross with the similar crosses found in Kerala. The result has been

that they were all just imitations of the original cross on the Mount,

which has been made by the person of St. Thomas himself62.



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