John 20:25
Did Jesus die on a cross or a stake? (Jehovah's Witness Objection)
Historically and biblically, it is plain that Jesus died on a cross. Some groups, however, teach that Jesus died on a single upright stake, not a cross. While the shape of the piece of wood does not change the fact that He shed His blood for our sins, it is worth pausing to consider the facts:
The Greek word, which in many Bibles is translated into "cross," is the Greek word "stauros" which means, "an upright stake, esp. a pointed one, a cross." The word itself, therefore, can be used for either shape piece of wood. The details of the narrative, however, give us a clearer picture. If a stake were used, instead of a cross, then Jesus' hands would have been placed above His head with a nail driven through His wrists. Since the wrists would most likely overlap, only one nail would be driven through both wrists. However, John 20:25 says,
> "The other disciples therefore said unto him, 'We have seen the Lord. But he said to them, except I shall see in his hands the print of the nails, and put my finger into the print of the nails, and thrust my hand into his side, I will not believe.'"
Notice the use of the word nails (plural) in reference to his hands (plural). It makes far more sense to say that Jesus was crucified on a cross with outstretched hands and one nail in each hand. That is why it says "...in his hands the print of the nails..."
Therefore, it is most logical to state that Jesus died on a cross with outstretched arms. This also corresponds with relevant archeological evidence. The remains of a crucified Jewish man named Yehohanon, who was executed in the late 20's A.D. (not long before Jesus) under the administration of Pontius Pilate was unearthed in a Judean tomb. Forensic analysis of the remains indicates that he was crucified with his arms stretched apart. A nail was found still embedded in his heel bone. All these details accord with the description of the similar execution of Jesus under Pilate, and point toward a cross shape rather than a single, upright beam or stake.
The testimony of the early Christians also points unanimously to a cross shape. A popular Christian document of the early 100s A.D. compares the cross to the Greek letter "tau" which looks very much like our "t," and also speaks of the cross prefigured in Moses stretching out his arms over the battlefield of the armies of Israel. Justin Martyr (114-165 AD) wrote that the Passover lamb prefigured not only Jesus but also the cross. Irenaeus also describes the cross's shape as having points both up and down and to each side.
Even some of the earliest New Testament manuscripts we have found (P45, P66, and P75) abbreviate the Greek word "Stauros" by omitting the "au" in the middle and putting the Greek letters for "t" and "r" on top of one another, causing them to form a "t" shape with a circle over it, or a graphic of a figure crucified on a cross. All of this together constitutes rather broad testimony that the earliest Christians believed that Jesus died with His arms stretched out on a cross.
Some point out that the cross is a pagan symbol in some ancient cultures, but a cross is simply two intersecting lines. The cross was one of the Roman Empire's methods of execution simply because putting two beams together to nail someone to forms a cross shape. Rome was a pagan culture, so it would not be strange for them to use a pagan symbol in their executions.