11 men hang on cross for Easter exhibition

A cross at the Easter Journey exhibition at Bethlehem Baptist Church. Photo/ David Hall

Over the Easter weekend, 11 men will hang on a cross for an hour each in an “emotional journey” as part of the Easter exhibition at Bethlehem Baptist Church, which is held every two years.

Congregation member Bryson Moulton is one of the men, and he said it would be the first time he had been up on the cross, a depiction of the crucifixion the church hosted every year.

“It is an honour and a privilege,” he said.

Bryson Moulton gets ready to play his part and will be suspended from the cross for one hour. Photo/ David Hall
Bryson Moulton gets ready to play his part and will be suspended from the cross for one hour. Photo/ David Hall

He said the make-up for the role took about an hour to apply and would be a very immersive experience for visitors.

The most challenging aspects would be physically hanging on the cross and spiritual elements, he said.

“It is quite an experience.

“These guys will be seeing people’s emotions coming through.”

Moulton took three months of training to get ready for his role. Photo/ David Hall
Moulton took three months of training to get ready for his role. Photo/ David Hall

Initially, the idea of going up on the cross came about 15 years ago, when Bethlehem Baptist Church began recruiting a team, senior pastor Craig Vernhall said.

“This is quite gruelling,” he said.

Vernhall said the one-hour stint on the cross at Tauranga’s Bethlehem Baptist Church was just one of the exhibits on display during the Easter Journey exhibition.

“Nearly 400 volunteers have worked tirelessly in preparation for the exhibition,” Vernhall said.

Certain aspects of the biblical story of Jesus have been challenging to depict, Vernhall said.

“It’s been difficult to capture this because you don’t want it to be overly gruesome.”

Visitors are transported to Bethlehem, Judea, and the Sea of Galilee in linked rooms.

Vernhall said the exhibition was held every two years and evolved, experimenting with new ideas.

“It was a lot simpler than it is now.”

This event is free and open to all.

Thursday: 3pm – 8.30pm

Friday and Saturday: 9am – 6pm

Sunday: 9am – 2.30pm

2 comments

Really!

Posted on 19-04-2025 18:26 | By phoebe12

Words fail me!


@Phoebe

Posted on 20-04-2025 13:47 | By morepork

I understand how you feel. However, words rarely fail me... :-)
I think the important thing here is tolerance for beliefs which we may personally be puzzled by. Throughout history, there has been enough death and destruction caused by Religious conviction that it is time we all grew up and realized that ANY belief is OK, AS LONG AS IT DOES NOT CAUSE PROBLEM OR HARM to non-believers.
We need to develop tolerance.
If I had neighbours whose religious persuasion required them to sacrifice live goats publicly in the street, for example, I'd have a problem with that. I'd certainly go and talk to them and explain that, while it might be normal and accepted in their culture, it isn't in ours. Keep the sacrifices away from the public and shielded from view. They might consider less frequency of such sacrifices too...
We can work it out.


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