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Hand crafted
olive wood Tau Cross Pendent |
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Description
Name:
A wonderful Olive Wood hand-made Tau
Cross! Hand Made in the city of Bethlehem the Holy Land,
Description:
This
Uniquely hand crafted
olive wood Tau pendant
was hand-carved with passion from the heart by the
Bible Artists in the Holy city of Bethlehem in the Holy Land. It is carved from
authentic Bethlehem Holy Land
Olive Wood. Environment friendly, made from the trimmings of the olive
trees, an essential process which allows a new and healthier growth for
the trees. No Tree was damaged or destroyed in the process of
harvesting the wood.
Size :
1
1/2" x 1 1/2"
A certificate of authenticity is
included.

T he Tau Cross
(in the shape of the Greek letter "T") was an implement of
deadly torture used by the Romans in Palestine during the
1st century. This style of cross is believed to be the type
used to crucify Jesus.
Although
originally an instrument of death, the cross has become the
predominant symbol of the Christian faith. The Roman style
cross, like the one more commonly seen in popular jewelry
(†), did not come into Christian symbolism until after the
1st century.
The Tau Cross
represents a more historic and accurate representation of
the cross on which Christ would have would have been
crucified. The scroll at the top represents the inscription
over the cross of Jesus which read "Jesus of Nazareth, King
of the Jews", often shown with just the Latin first letters
as "INRI".
After his
commission at the foot of the San Damiano Cross, Saint
Francis chose a more ancient symbol of redemption as his
standard: the Tau cross.
In commenting
on the scriptures of Israel, the early Christian writers
used its Greek translation, the Septuagint, in which the
last letter of the Hebrew alphabet, the Tau, was transcribed
as a “T” in Greek. Prefigured in the last letter of the
Hebrew alphabet, then, the stylized Tau cross came to
represent the means by which Christ reversed the
disobedience of the old Adam and became our Savior as the
“New Adam.”
Saint Francis
had first encountered this symbol when he was caring for
lepers. He and the religious followers of St. Anthony the
Hermit, who were working with him, used Christ’s
cross—shaped like a Greek “T”—as a protection against the
plague and other skin diseases. Saint Francis eventually
accepted and adapted the “T” as his own crest and signature.
For him, the “T” represented life-long fidelity to the
Passion of Christ. It was his pledge to serve the least, the
leper and outcast of his day.
The Tau
imagery was intensified when Pope Innocent III opened the
Fourth Latern Council (1215) using the exhortation of the
Old Testament prophet Ezekiel (9:4): We are called to reform
our lives, to stand in the presence of God as righteous
people. God will know us by the sign of the “Tau” marked on
our foreheads. This symbolic imagery, used by the same Pope
who commissioned Francis’ new community a brief five years
earlier, was immediately taken to heart as the friars’ call
to reform.
Knowing that
the best documents and decrees from “above” go unnoticed
until they are translated into good deeds in the streets
“below,” Saint Francis stretched out his arms and proclaimed
to his friars that their religious habit (tunic) was the Tau
cross. Not only did the habit reflect the shape of this
cross, but it also wrapped each friar in his life-long
commitment to become a walking crucifix, the incarnation of
a compassionate God.
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