The Easter Lily.
For many, the beautiful trumpet-shaped white flowers symbolize purity,
virtue, innocence, hope and life—the spiritual essence of Easter.
History, mythology,
literature, poetry and the world of art are rife with stories and images
that speak of the beauty and majesty of the elegant white flowers. Often
called the “white-robed apostles of hope,” lilies were found growing in
the Garden of Gethsemane after Christ’s agony. Tradition has it that the
beautiful white lilies sprung up where drops of Christ’s sweat fell to
the ground in his final hours of sorrow and deep distress. Churches
continue this tradition at Easter time by banking their altars and
surrounding their crosses with masses of Easter Lilies, to commemorate
the resurrection of Jesus Christ and hope of life everlasting.
Since the beginning
of time, lilies have played significant roles in allegorical tales
concerning the sacrament of motherhood. Roman mythology links it to
Juno, the queen of the gods. The story goes that while Juno was nursing
her son Hercules, excess milk fell from the sky. Although part of it
remained above the earth (thus creating the group of stars known as the
Milky Way), the remainder fell to the earth, creating lilies. Another tradition
has it that the lily sprang from the repentant tears of
Eve as she went forth from Paradise.
The pure white lily
has long been closely associated with the Virgin Mary. In early
paintings, the Angel Gabriel is pictured extending to the Virgin Mary a
branch of pure white lilies, announcing that she is to be the mother of
the Christ Child. In other paintings, saints are pictured bringing vases
full of white lilies to Mary and the infant Jesus. St. Joseph is
depicted holding a lily-branch in his hand, indicating that his wife
Mary was a virgin.
The legend is told
that when the Virgin Mary’s tomb was visited three days after her
burial, it was found empty save for bunches of majestic white lilies.
Early writers and artists made the lily the emblem of the Annunciation,
the Resurrection of the Virgin: the pure white petals signifying her
spotless body and the golden anthers her soul glowing with heavenly
light.… A mark of purity and
grace throughout the ages, the regal white lily is a fitting symbol of
the greater meaning of Easter. Gracing millions of homes and churches,
the flowers embody joy, hope and life.
Whether given as a gift or
enjoyed in your own home, the Easter Lily, along with other
Easter blooms, serves as a beautiful reminder that Easter is a time
for rejoicing and celebrating.
During the Victorian
era, however, the very conspicuous stamens and pistils were removed
because they were seen as overt symbols of sexuality that might move the
congregation to impure thoughts (Sara Williams).
The following poem by
Louise Lewin Matthews
captures the spiritual essence of the Easter Lily:
Easter morn with lilies fair
Fills the church with perfumes rare,
As their clouds of incense rise,
Sweetest offerings to the skies.
Stately lilies pure and white
Flooding darkness with their light,
Bloom and sorrow drifts away,
On this holy hallow’d day.
Easter Lilies bending low
in the golden afterglow,
Bear a message from the sod
To the heavenly towers of God.
-Louise Lewin Matthews
Sources:
from
http://extension-horticulture.tamu.edu/plantanswers/publications/lily/lily.html
“Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable,” compiled by Ivor H Evans. Harper & Row, 1989, p. 663
Thoughts on the Easter Lily
Rightly the lily is the flower of Easter. It lies buried in the ooze of
pond or stream. There is nothing in the grave of the dead lily that
appeals to nostril or eye. But silently the forces of life are working
in the dark and the damp to prepare a glorious resurrection. A shaft of
green shoots upward toward the sun. This is followed by a cluster of
tiny buds. One day the sun smiles with special warmth upon the dank,
black ooze, and there leaps into the light a creature of light and
beauty; it is the lily, an angel of the earth, whose look is light.
Author Unknown
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