Garments as a Symbol of Unity
One of the most powerful historical symbols of the unity of the Catholic Church has been the seamless garment worn by Christ at the crucifixion. The Gospel of John tells us that the garment Jesus was wearing at the time He was sent to the cross “was without seam, woven from the top throughout” (John 19:23). […]
One of the most powerful historical symbols of the unity of the Catholic Church has been the seamless garment worn by Christ at the crucifixion. The Gospel of John tells us that the garment Jesus was wearing at the time He was sent to the cross “was without seam, woven from the top throughout” (John 19:23). This signifies the “oneness” of the Church. The lack of seams means that the garment is unitary; it is not cobbled together from various distinct pieces.
According to the Church Fathers, just as the seamless garment of Christ cannot be divided without destroying it, so the Church of Christ can suffer no division. The Church is fundamentally one, as we profess in the Creed.
The identification of the garment with the Church is very ancient. As far as I am aware, it goes back at least to St. Cyprian of Carthage (d. 257) in his famous work On the Unity of the Church. This is St. Cyprian’s masterpiece, wherein he expounds upon the true supernatural unity of the Catholic Church in one of the first systematic treatises on ecclesiology.
Of the Church’s oneness, St. Cyprian of Carthage wrote:
This bond of a concord inseparably cohering, is set forth where in the Gospel the coat of the Lord Jesus Christ is not at all divided nor cut, but is received as an entire garment, and is possessed as an uninjured and undivided robe by those who cast lots concerning Christ’s garment, who should rather put on Christ. Holy Scripture speaks, saying, ‘But of the coat, because it was not sewed, but woven from the top throughout, they said one to another, Let us not rend it, but cast lots whose it shall be.” That coat bore with it an unity that came down from the top, that is, that came from heaven and the Father, which was not to be at all rent by the receiver and the possessor, but without separation we obtain a whole and substantial entireness. He cannot possess the garment of Christ who parts and divides the Church of Christ (On the Unity of the Church, 7).
As the garment was woven throughout from the top down, so the Church of Christ is established “from the top down,” that is, from God the Father. Christ’s unity is indivisible.
Elsewhere, Cyprian teaches that this unity is not a mere human unity based on the consensus of wills or on a common goal, but it is the supernatural unity of the Trinity itself:
He who breaks the peace and the concord of Christ, does so in opposition to Christ; he who gathers elsewhere than in the Church, scatters the Church of Christ. The Lord says, ‘I and the Father are one; (John 10:30) and again it is written of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, ‘And these three are one.’ (1 John 5:7) And does any one believe that this unity which thus comes from the divine strength and coheres in celestial sacraments, can be divided in the Church, and can be separated by the parting asunder of opposing wills? He who does not hold this unity does not hold God’s law, does not hold the faith of the Father and the Son, does not hold life and salvation” (Ibid., 6).
The unity of the Church is the very same unity our Lord shares with the Father, as explained in John 17. The perfect sign of that unity is the seamless robe of Christ. This theme will be repeated throughout Church history. For example, the symbol is again employed in Boniface VIII’s 1302 bull Unam Sanctam:
He has called one because of the unity of the Spouse, of the faith, of the sacraments, and of the charity of the Church. This is the tunic of the Lord, the seamless tunic, which was not rent but which was cast by lot (Unam Sanctam, 2)
The association of garments with unity is an interpretive schema found in the Bible itself. If St. Cyprian saw the garment of Christ as a sign of the unity of the Kingdom of God, it is only because in the Bible garments have always signified the unity of a kingdom; conversely, the ripping or rending of garments in the Bible signifies the dismantling of a kingdom.
In the days of Saul, the king was commanded by God to destroy the Amalekites but Saul spared their king and took spoil for himself and his men. The prophet Samuel came to rebuke King Saul for this disobedience, which lead to Saul losing the kingdom. Note the symbolism of the episode:
And Saul said to Samuel, “I have sinned; for I have transgressed the commandment of the Lord and your words, because I feared the people and obeyed their voice. Now therefore, I pray, pardon my sin, and return with me, that I may worship the Lord.” And Samuel said to Saul, “I will not return with you; for you have rejected the word of the Lord, and the Lord has rejected you from being king over Israel.” As Samuel turned to go away, Saul laid hold upon the skirt of his robe, and it tore. And Samuel said to him, “The Lord has torn the kingdom of Israel from you this day, and has given it to a neighbor of yours, who is better than you” (1 Samuel 15:24-28).
The unity of the kingdom of Israel was signified by Samuel’s robe. When Saul tore this robe, it symbolized that the kingdom was being “torn” from him.
We see a similar episode in the reign of Solomon. When Solomon sinned by worshiping foreign gods, the Lord promised to tear the kingdom away from him: “Because thou hast done this, and hast not kept my covenant, and my precepts, which I have commanded thee, I will divide and rend thy kingdom, and will give it to thy servant” (1 Kings 11:11). And how did God signify this rending? In the following passage, the prophet Ahijah goes to the rebel Jeroboam son of Nebat to tell him that God will bestow a kingdom upon him. Pay attention to the prophetic imagery:
And at that time, when Jeroboam went out of Jerusalem, the prophet Ahijah the Shilonite found him on the road. Now Ahijah had clad himself with a new garment; and the two of them were alone in the open country. Then Ahijah laid hold of the new garment that was on him, and tore it into twelve pieces. And he said to Jeroboam, “Take for yourself ten pieces; for thus says the Lord, the God of Israel, ‘Behold, I am about to tear the kingdom from the hand of Solomon, and will give you ten tribes; but he shall have one tribe, for the sake of my servant David and for the sake of Jerusalem (1 Kings 11:29-32).
The rending of the garment signifies the destruction of the unity of the Kingdom of Solomon.
Finally, though it is not specifically stated in the Scripture, we could also infer that the destruction of the robe of Joseph by his brethren (Gen. 37:29-32)—who tore it and splattered blood on it—signifies the disunity of the House of Jacob.
So it is a thoroughly biblical principle that the garments tend to represent houses or kingdoms. The rending or destruction of the garment signifies the rending or disunity of the kingdom; similarly, the integrity of the garment symbolizes the unity of the kingdom. Thus Cyprian and the Catholic Tradition are following very biblical lines of thought when they see in the seamless robe of Christ a type of the Kingdom of God, the Church, and its dynamic inner unity.
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