of this Lutheran church features a very large
altar cross. Although Christians accepted that the cross was the
gallows on which Jesus died, they had already begun in the 2nd century to use it as a Christian symbol. During the first three centuries of the Christian era the cross was "a symbol of minor importance" when compared to the prominence given to it later, but by the second century it was closely associated with Christians, to the point where Christians were mocked as "adorers of the gibbet" (), an accusation countered by
Tertullian. and it was already a tradition for Christians to trace repeatedly on their foreheads the sign of the cross.
Martin Luther at the time of the Reformation retained the cross and
crucifix in the
Lutheran Church, which remains an important feature of Lutheran devotion and worship today. Luther wrote: , "The cross alone is our theology." On the other hand, the
Great Iconoclasm was a wave of rejecting sacred images among Calvinists of the 16th century. Some localities (such as England) included polemics against using the cross in worship. For example, during the 16th century, theologians in the
Anglican and
Reformed traditions
Nicholas Ridley,
James Calfhill, and
Theodore Beza, rejected practices that they described as cross worship. Considering it a form of idolatry, there was a dispute in 16th century England over the baptismal use of the sign of the cross and even the public use of crosses. There were more active reactions to religious items that were thought as 'relics of
Papacy', as happened for example in September 1641, when Sir
Robert Harley pulled down and destroyed the cross at Wigmore. Writers during the 19th century indicating a Pagan origin of the cross included
Henry Dana Ward, Mourant Brock, and
John Denham Parsons. David Williams, writing of medieval images of monsters, says: "The disembodied phallus is also formed into a cross, which, before it became for Christianity the symbol of salvation, was a pagan symbol of fertility." The study,
Gods, Heroes & Kings: The Battle for Mythic Britain states: "Before the fourth century CE, the cross was not widely embraced as a sign of Christianity, symbolizing as it did the gallows of a criminal." This reaction in the Anglican and other Reformed Churches was short-lived and the cross became ubiquitous in these Christian traditions.
Jehovah's Witnesses do not use the symbol of the cross in their worship, which they believe constitutes
idolatry. They believe that Jesus died on a single upright torture stake rather than a two-beam cross, arguing that the Greek term indicated a single upright pole. Although early
Watch Tower Society publications associated with the
Bible Student movement taught that Christ was executed on a cross, it no longer appeared on Watch Tower Society publications after the name ''Jehovah's '' was adopted in 1931, and use of the cross was officially abandoned in 1936.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints teaches that Jesus died on a cross; however, their prophet
Gordon B. Hinckley stated that "for us the cross is the symbol of the dying Christ, while our message is a declaration of the living Christ." When asked what was the symbol of his religion, Hinckley replied "the lives of our people must become the only meaningful expression of our faith and, in fact, therefore, the symbol of our worship." Prophet
Howard W. Hunter encouraged Latter-day Saints "to look to the temple of the Lord as the great symbol of your membership." Images of LDS temples and the
Angel Moroni (who is found in statue on most temples) are commonly used to
symbolize the faith of members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. In April 2020, under
President Russell M. Nelson, the
Church formally adopted an image inspired by
Thorvaldsen's Christus statue underlain with the Church's name as an official symbol of the faith. ==Notable individual crosses==