Legend of the Dogwood
The Legend Of The Dogwood Two thousand years ago,
few trees in the Middle East were not big enough to
construct anything. However, one tree was valued above
the others for its thick trunk and fine, strong wood. When
the Romans came to rule over Jerusalem, their government
used this same timber to build the crosses for executing
criminals. A group of workers were assigned to gather
wood for the crosses. Before long, every Roman official
knew the best wood came from these gatherers of execution
wood, so those workers became popular.
One day, the wood gatherers received a special request. An
officer of the Roman court came and said, "The King of
Jews is to be put to death. Deliver an extra-large cross made from your finest wood. So, a
fresh tree was cut from the forest of the trees with thick trunks and fine, strong wood. An
extra-tall (and extra-heavy) cross was quickly made and delivered.
Three days after the death of Jesus of Nazareth, the chief wood gatherer got alarming news.
"All of our finest trees are withering!" the messenger whispered. The wood gatherer hurried
to the forest and saw that it was true.
Several years later, the chief wood gatherer heard that, every spring, many people visited the
old forest that had once made his job so easy. Despite his advancing years, he set out to
discover why. He saw the remains of forest, now like a salty bottoms, with only a few trees
still standing tall, bare, lifeless and rotting. But what was this?
As he drew closer, his feeble eyes could make out the people walking among thousands of
beautiful, flowering bushes. Seeing one of his own workers there, the old man said, "No one
could ever make a cross out of this twisted wood. Our finest tree has gone to the dogs!" He
noticed the beautiful white flowers, each blossom looking as if it had been burned from the
touch of a miniature cross.
So...an old and beautiful legend has it that, at the time of the crucifixion, the dogwood was
comparable in size to the oak tree and other monarchs of the forest. Because of its firmness
and strength it was selected as the timber for the cross, but to be put to such a cruel use
greatly distressed the tree. Sensing this, the crucified Jesus in his gentle pity for the sorrow
and suffering of all said to it: "Because of your sorrow and pity for My sufferings, never
again will the dogwood tree grow large enough to be used as a gibbet.
Henceforth it will be slender, bent and twisted and its blossom?s will be in the form of a cross
-- two long and two short petals. 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 this will remember.?
Will you remember that Jesus died for us and we are saved by His grace ?
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