I think I'll do some research on Christianity and its adoption of the cross.
Personally I don't see how God could be amiable to having the foundation upon which his one and only son murdered. Take that a step further and one wonders how God feels about crucifixes. As if the cross wasn't bad enough, now you feel it necessary to have Christ emblazoned upon your neck battered, bloody and bruised?
EDIT:
Once again, it looks like Christianity adopted pagan rituals for its own use, druids in this case. The earliest accounts/images of Christ show him on a stake, WITHOUT a crossbar. In fact, the term used in the gospels is "stauros" which means a vertical pole without a crossbar in the original Greek. It also looks like the early church fathers were AGAINST using the cross as a religious symbol. Here's the link:
http://www.religioustolerance.org/chr_symb.htm
EDIT EDIT:
Father John Dobson, a Roman Catholic Priest in Australia says it better than I can. He said the crucifix should never have become the symbol of Christianity because it was a means of execution. "If Christianity means life it is the resurrection that is our real symbol. But maybe the crucifix is the appropriate symbol for such negative, confining thinkers who are terrified to think in a more lateral, open way. These people love to debate what other people should or shouldn't be thinking or doing and whether they belong in the Christian tradition or not. Christianity was surely never meant to be a stick to belt someone on the head with, but rather a constant call to a meaningful life with God."
This was an interesting find too...
The earliest symbol of Christianity is neither the cross nor the crucifix; it is the Agnus Dei—the Lamb of God. Representations of Our Lord nailed to a cross began to appear in Christian works of art in the 5th century, after Christianity emerged from the catacombs and became a "public" religion. When Christianity was a persecuted religion, prior to the conversion of Constantine (A.D. 312), when crucifixion was still used as a common means of capital punishment, Christians did not use the crucifix as an icon. It was simply too conspicuous.
The Council of Constantinople in A.D. 629 ordered: "That, instead of the lamb, our Lord Jesus Christ will be shown hereafter in His human form in images so that we shall be led to remember His mortal life, His passion, and His death, which paid the ransom for mankind"—this image was the crucifix.