![[Cradle and Cross]](http://www.udayton.edu/mary/images/creches/creches99/creche9909.jpg)
Cradle
and Cross
Caritas Müller
Switzerland
Hans Wachter
Germany
Cradle and cross are never far apart in Christian
thought. The first leads to the second, as certain as Christmas leads into
Easter. At first sight, this double set is made of contrasts. Stoneware clashes
with bronze, and the lovely nativity group seems to disagree with the stylized
forms of book and cross. In fact, there is complementarily not only in color and
weight: both lend a discreet nobility to the book as well as to the cradle. The
delightful idyll of parents and animals gathered around the child is not without
foreboding. The insouciant animal companions contrast somewhat with the more
reflective parents. They seem perplexed and helpless, somehow anticipating the
next scene with the crucified Son at its center. Tucked between the pages of the
book of life, the Savior on the cross looks like a pressed flower. He is a
constant reminder that the many pages of his message are drawing their fullness
of meaning from his death and resurrection. Thus, cradle and cross have a
twofold meaning. They both speak the language of Christmas and Easter.