The Christo Aparecido

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The study of religion is often a rigorous process because the central tenets of the subject: image, ritual, and myth are often copious in their complexity. For example, consider the multiple meanings that are inherent in the image of a crucifix. Some Christians might view it as an image of suffering, whilst others would reject that notion and instead perceive it to be one of love. These differences may seem inconsequential at first, but they can overtime shape the beliefs of an individual and by extension a community. To understand this dynamic better one only has to analyze the Christo Aparecido (Christ Appeared), an authentic Mexican crucifix with a fascinating history from the colonial era to the present. This history is made known by the text, Biography of a Mexican Crucifix: Lived Religion and Local Faith from the Conquest to the Present by Jennifer Hughes, from which I contend that over the life of the Christo Aparecido there continues to be an understanding among devotees that this crucifix is sacred because it displays animus while being a vestige for the sacred to occupy. To support my position I will attempt to relate the moments where the Christo Aparecido is said to show signs of life, in particular his stay in Mexico City during the colonial era and his role in more modern times with rival groups clashing over its efficacy in the village of Totolapan.

“With all due ceremony and pageantry, the believers of Mexico City gathered to welcome the Christo Aparecido of Totolapan at the Augustinian Colegio de San Pablo.” (P. 91). In this passage we can infer that from the moment that the Christo Aparecido arrives in Mexico City the crucifix is treated as though he was Christ incarnate. This inference, on the part of the res...

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...e for themselves the way in which image, ritual, myth guided their lives.

By analyzing the moments, past and present, in which the Christo Aparecido shows itself to be animate it can be said, “that the people of Totolapan understand themselves as both syncretic and traditional in their beliefs and practices (P. 179). It is this combination of syncretism and traditionalism that solidifies,“The Christo's status as a Santo, a manifestation of the divine for the people of Totolapan and as the central symbol of local religious and cultural identity” (P. 173). Thus, we can account for the continuity of the Christo Aparecido by the fact it has survived relegation to idolatry because the people are confident of its animus held within to be present. As long as this remains true the Christo, in the words of his devotees', will be continue understood as “tiempo inmemorial”.

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