Thursday, April 2, 2015
the Legend of the Dogwood...a Maundy Thursday reminder
It was a warm spring day many years ago when I first heard the legend of the
Dogwood tree. My Grandmother was standing at the wood line behind her home and
she was so joyful that she had spotted a dogwood in the shadow of the tall long
leaf pines. I remember walking over to where she stood to see what she was
doing. We were there for Easter, having driven from Tampa, Fla., to spend Easter
with the family. Mammy, as we called her, was stroking the petals of the little
tree and a tear was rolling down her face. I asked her why she was crying and
she told me she was sharing the pain of the little tree. I didn't understand and
she saw the confusion on my face and smiled. She asked me if I had not been told
the Legend of the Dogwood. I told her I didn't think I had and she shook her
head and told me to sit down. Now, Mammy had been a teacher most of her life.
She never missed an opportunity to teach us things she thought we should know. I
took a seat on a big old tree that had been felled by a spring storm and she sat
beside me. This is the Legend she recited to me. At the time of Crucifixion the
dogwood had been the size of the oak and other forest trees. So firm and strong
was the tree that it was chosen as the timber for the cross. To be used thus for
such a cruel purpose greatly distressed the tree, and Jesus nailed upon it,
sensed this. In His gentle pity for all sorrow and suffering Jesus said to the
tree: “Because of your regret and pity for My suffering, never again shall the
dogwood tree grow large enough to be used as a cross. Henceforth it shall be
slender and bent and twisted and its blossoms shall be in the form of a cross —
two long and two short petals. And in the center of the outer edge of each petal
there will be nail prints, brown with rust and stained with red, and in the
center of the flower will be a crown of thorns, and all who see it will
remember.” It did not take long for the forests of Dogwoods to begin withering
and dying. They did not die completely, only becoming slender and bent and now
the flowers came profusely, showing the story of the crucifixion in their
petals. I thought of this a few weeks ago as I noticed the dogwoods in bloom as
we drove down Highway 151. The most beautiful of all were not the healthy ones
that came from a nursery, well fed and tended. They looked taller and stronger
than the real beauties, the ones that grew up wild in the woods of pine and oak,
their limbs spindly and bent … the flowers are white, the nail marks marred by
the rusty color of old blood and the crown of thorns at the center that speaks
out to remind us, our Savior blessed you and and forgave you, just as he did the
once majestic Dogwood tree. Sometimes being brought low is not a punishment, but
a reminder. Rejoice, because this is Maundy Thursday. Good Friday will be time
enough to reflect on what was done to this gentle man, this son of God whom we
call Jesus. Our tears may flow as we do the Stations of the Cross, but much joy
will be shared on Easter Sunday. He is Risen … and the Dogwood still blooms with
the story.
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