Photo Mystery Solved!

Groom_stationsThanks for all the guesses about where I was in yesterday’s mystery photo. I hadn’t heard of most of the other giant crosses that folks mentioned.

The answer is that I was at the giant cross in Groom, Texas–population 587 (Saaaaaa-lute!).

The Groom cross site advertises itself as the world’s biggest cross (which it was, though another town has apparently built one that is 8 feet taller now) and also "A religious experience like no other!"

The latter is a tag line you see on a roadsign on I-40 to get you to stop at the cross, which is run by the innocuously named "Cross Ministries" (a.k.a. Cross Of Our Lord Jesus Christ Ministries).

What happens when you stop and get out of your vehicle is that you find there is a whole bunch of stuff at the cross. In fact, once you get there the real focus ceases to be on the giant cross itself, which comes to seem more like something impressive and visible from the roadside (from miles away!) designed to get you to stop and see the real religious content of the site.

Most of that religious content consists of life-sized statues forming the Stations of the Cross (above), though there are also other items, like a large plaque of the Ten Commandments with Jesus’ commandment to love at the bottom of it and a life-size replica of the Shroud of Turin and a life-size Empty Tomb (with an angel in it) and a pro-life memorial with Jesus holding a tiny, aborted baby in his hand.

Now, "Cross Ministries" is a name that sounds very interdenominational, and it’s nice to see an interdenominational group including something as Catholic as the Stations of the Cross (especially in the form of life-sized statues).

Only as you start working your way around the stations, you start suspecting that this group isn’t as interdenominational as it seems.

There are certain Catholic touches. . . . like when right before you get to the statues depicting the Crucifixion, you have to walk past another statue of Jesus celebrating the Eucharist at the Last Supper, emphasizing the link between the Cross and the Eucharist. And then there are these plaques on the ground explaining what the statues are, with Bible verses for you to meditate on, and the plaques around the Eucharist statue are all Bible verses emphasizing the Real Presence.

And for the Fourth Station (Jesus Meets His Mother, Mary) one of the Bible verses on the plaque is from Revelation 12.

And one of the plaques on the way to the gift shop (after you finish doing the stations) is titled "Pillar of Truth" and cites 1 Timothy 3:15.

And right in front of the gift shop is a huge fountain with a statue of Jesus and the plaque says "Divine Mercy Fountain," and the statue of Jesus is posed just like he is in the Divine Mercy devotion (only he doesn’t have rays of light streaming from his chest).

And in the gift shop there are not only tons of the kind of gift items (not books) that you’d find in a Protestant bookstore, there are also Divine Mercy posters (with the rays of light) and pictures of Mary and books by Cardinal Ratzinger and pictures of John Paul II and Pope Benedict.

Given the "Pillar of Truth" references that crop up more than once at the site, I half expected to find copies of Pillar of Fire, Pillar of Truth in the gift shop (which would have been cool, since I’m a co-author of that booklet), but I didn’t. I’ll have to contact the folks who run the site and see if they’d like me to send them some.

But all the Catholic stuff is doesn’t stop Protestants from being able to find meaning in this.

While I was there I spoke with a black lady truck driver from L.A. who had stopped and who gave every sign of being Protestant, yet who agreed with me when I said how much I liked the fact that they included the Stations of the Cross.

And then on the wall in the gift shop there’s a photo of Charlie Daniels (who is Protestant as far as I can tell, though he has Catholic-friendly themes in his songs sometimes, as in his "El Toreador" song) that the singer has autographed to the guys who run the site.

So I was really impressed!

Not only was the site moving to me as a Catholic, but it is intriguing and non-in-your-face enough that many  Protestants will find meaning in it, too.

What a wonderful way to help Protestants driving by on I-40 to stop and have a spiritual experience that puts them in touch with aspects of Christian spirituality that they otherwise would never experience.

Kudos to Cross Ministries!

Incidentally, I got pictures of the whole site and may do a web presentation on it for those who can’t make the trip to Groom–if there’s sufficient interest in that (and if I could get some help splicing and sizing the photos for the web).

MORE ON CROSS MINISTRIES.

Author: Jimmy Akin

Jimmy was born in Texas, grew up nominally Protestant, but at age 20 experienced a profound conversion to Christ. Planning on becoming a Protestant seminary professor, he started an intensive study of the Bible. But the more he immersed himself in Scripture the more he found to support the Catholic faith, and in 1992 he entered the Catholic Church. His conversion story, "A Triumph and a Tragedy," is published in Surprised by Truth. Besides being an author, Jimmy is the Senior Apologist at Catholic Answers, a contributing editor to Catholic Answers Magazine, and a weekly guest on "Catholic Answers Live."

14 thoughts on “Photo Mystery Solved!”

  1. Jared, your reply got me curious. So I Googled and came up with this entry on Route66University.com.
    Excerpt:
    “Blessed Mary’s Restaurant in Groom makes a righteous cheeseburger, and the enchiladas are heavenly. What distinguishes this spot on Historic Route 66 is that there are no prices on the menu and no cash register on the premises. There is only a big jar by the door and a sign asking you to pay what you can. Any profits are donated to charity.”

  2. Stinker. If you’da show’d the S of C, I’d know’d, since we stopped there too. There’s a DQ a smidge East’a there. MY kids remember that.

  3. Neat, I’ve never really wanted to stop by it when I drive past occasionally. Now I think I may…time permitting (once you get to that part of TX, you really want to get out as quickly as possible…I-40 becomes a very long stretch of flat nothing for quite a while there..No offense to the Texans out there.)

  4. I thought Charlie Daniels was (is) Catholic. I can’t for the life of me recall where I saw on TV or in print in the last year or so a piece about him & his faith & he mentioned that he’s Catholic. I’m almost sure it was a TV interview. I don’t think it was on EWTN. And it seems to me it was around the time JPII died & some news channel was getting the celebrity reaction angle, etc. I’ll keep thinking about it. It’s gonna bug me now. Anyone know the straight dope?

  5. Jimmy,
    Their website links the Douay-Rheims Bible, and that page has links to radtrad sites. Interesting.

  6. Well that will teach me to not skip a day or two looking at your website. I knew right were that was. I did a short stint as an over the road truck driver and I passed that cross many times. I envy you that you were able to be out there while on vacation and actually stop. Thank you for sharing your experience as I don’t know if I will ever get out that way again.

  7. I guess I always thought this attraction was a ministry of the Diocese of Amarillo (run by the outstanding Bishop Yanta). And isn’t it also a memorial to the unborn?

  8. Edward:
    Shoot, you’re right. THAT was the name of the restaurant.
    This is a long story, but, one week after my wife and I got married (June 4, 2004), we drove from Miwaukee to L.A. Driving down highway 40 (of Brak fame) in our tiny, tightly-packed car with no AC and a radiator problem, we saw the cross and decided to stop. One of the first things we saw was the restaurant in question, so we stopped in to cool off and get some ice cream. The owner of the place was the only one there and so, he sat with us a while and discussed our situation and aspirations with us.
    We took some comfort from our conversation with the man (whose name is embarrassingly escaping me) and then moved on to the cross. There is a strong sense of sanctity about that place. The most powerful piece for us that day came from the pro-life memorial which depicts a weeping Jesus holding a tiny aborted baby in His hand.
    Groom’s a pretty cool place.

  9. Awesome! Anyone who visits the Cross in Groom will never forget it..For there is peace,holiness and many messages to be taken from this beautiful place in the Texas pandhandle..we tell all our friends about it and tell them to make a visit in person or visit thier web site..God Bless the Thomas’s who have taken on this wonderful ministry…

  10. Awesome! Anyone who visits the Cross in Groom will never forget it..For there is peace,holiness and many messages to be taken from this beautiful place in the Texas pandhandle..we tell all our friends about it and tell them to make a visit in person or visit thier web site..God Bless the Thomas’s who have taken on this wonderful ministry…

  11. Nothing like a good “chicken-fried steak” and mashed potatoes also including milk gravy & field peas w/snaps…..

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