(NOTE:
While visiting our Sister Church in Lithuania with our mission team in
2008, we had the opportunity to stop at the Hill of Crosses. -- Dave Wilkinson)
SYMBOLIZING FAITH, HOPE AND
LOVE
The
people of Lithuania
take cross bearing a little more seriously than we do. For them the cross
symbolizes faith, hope and love. There are crosses everywhere in the
countryside, on roads, in city parks and village squares. Communities and
individuals erect crosses to bring them health and to commemorate events like
weddings, births and christenings. Crosses are also erected to commemorate
historical events. One of these is the Baltic Way, in which millions of people
linked hands stretching across the Baltics from Estonia
to Lithuania
on August 25, 1989. About 9 monuments commemorate this extraordinary event.
The
nation's pride is the Hill of Crosses, located north of Siauliai. Lithuanians erected crosses there
as early as the mid-19th century. The Soviet government couldn't tolerate that
kind of spiritual expression, so they totally destroyed the hill in 1961, then
again in 1973 and 1975. But people kept erecting more crosses, until in 1980
their destruction stopped. Today the crosses number in the many thousands. They
are different sizes and shapes, some simple, some ornate, but they immortalize Lithuania's
troubles, misfortunes, joys, hope and faith.
For
them, the cross is more than a symbol in the church. It is symbol for the world
to see. A symbol that will not go away. It is a symbol of sacrifice. A
sacrifice that gives each and every one of us hope and faith and courage.
-- Billy D. Strayhorn in At
Cross Purposes
#3158
Many many thanks for your dedication in this ministry!
ReplyDeletefrom one who really appreciates it
regards, A. Peake