214-351-1901
info@cathedralofhope.com
Blessed are those that trust in the Lord,
whose trust is the Lord.
They shall be like a tree planted by water,
sending out its roots by the stream.
It shall not fear when heat comes,
and its leaves shall stay green;
In the year of drought it is not anxious,
and it does not cease to bear fruit.
Jeremiah 17: 7-8
WORDS OF HOPE
Yesterday, Ernesto, a SaveATree associate, came to apply the first of this year’s infusion of organic nutrients and specialized soil enhancement blends into the ground around my beloved red oak. This towering great- grandmother tree was probably already rooted before the neighborhood developed and has been a home for generations of blue jay families and busy squirrels and has hosted occasional visitations by owls. Now structural issues and disease have rendered her vulnerable, but I cannot bear to have her cut down. Her stately presence, welcoming leafy boughs, and autumnal glory sustain me—are, in fact, a part of me, so I will do whatever I can for as long as I can to keep her alive.
Our small group is honoring Eastertide by reading works about the resurrecting power of Nature and have found plenty of writers who celebrate the gifts of trees. Poet laureate Ana Limon draws strength from the greening of trees: “Patient, plodding, a green skin growing over whatever winter did to us, a return to the strange idea of continuous living despite the mess of us, the hurt, the empty.” In a blog post, Rev. Anna Blaedel asserts: “Trees, I swear, metabolize trauma. Cup our grief and absorb our tears and compost our despair and offer back breath. Shade. Shelter.”
Mary Oliver was “saved” daily by the hints of gladness given off by trees, and it was in going to the woods that she, like Thoreau, learned life lessons: that it is our purpose “to go easy, to be filled with light and to shine.”
The Bible has well over a hundred references to trees. Several, like the passage above from Jeremiah, image trees which thrive—even in drought—because they are deeply rooted by the streams of living waters, steadfast, trusting in God.
Trees frame the Bible, flourishing in the Garden of Eden where our ancestors walked and talked with God in the twilight and brimming with sustenance and beauty in the visionary yearning of Revelation. “Then the angel showed me the river of the water of life, bright as crystal, flowing from the throne of God and of the Lamb through the middle of the street of the city. On either
side of the river was the tree of life, with its twelve kinds of fruit, producing its fruit for each month; and the leaves of the tree are for the healing of the nations” (Rev. 22: 1-2).
Startling new research has shown that trees have underground networks which communicate and share nutrients and even warn each other of impending harm. The “mother tree” in a forest can actually send nutrients to seedlings at times they need them in order to preserve their health. (See Suzanne Simard’s Finding the Mother Tree: Discovering the Wisdom of the Forest).
May we learn to see our kinship with all created forms that we may know that everything is holy.
PRAYER
Listen and receive Amy Grants’ song “Trees We’ll Never See.”
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Dr. Pat Saxon
Cathedral of Hope
Proclaiming Christ Through Faith, Hope and Love
5910 Cedar Springs Road | Dallas, TX | 75235
214-351-1901
info@cathedralofhope.com