Jesus is often referred to as the Lily of the Valley for many symbolic reasons. But I'll share my favorite reasons why this flower links so closely to Him:
With their heads bowed toward the ground, Lily of the Valley blooms represent the humility that Christ modeled. I struggle so much with this, being very stubborn and strong-willed at times. I constantly remind myself that humility is not weakness but the highest form of inner strength. We can most effectively serve others when we put away our false pride and humble ourselves. I love one definition I found for humility: "the absence of vanity." That about says it for me.
Lily of the valley, I learned, is an extremely fruitful plant. One root can produce fifty bulbs! That's a lot of lily! Through the death and resurrection of Jesus, He bears much fruit, and He glorified the Father by doing so. I am called to do the same. To bear fruit in His name by how I live my life and how I love others. This often produces a ripple effect in the world. As one good, humble deed often leads to other good deed by applying the "pay it forward" philosophy.
Another fact I learned about Lily of the Valley is that it exceeds other flowers in whiteness. This links to Jesus in His purity. In His lack of sin. And it's only by His purity that we are made clean and pure. I used to struggle with the teaching that we are truly made clean--white as snow--in God's eyes by His grace through Jesus. It's mind-boggling that anything so dirty could ever come clean again (although I've seen pressure washers do some good cleaning!). But I just have to come to grips with the fact that there are just some things that are true no matter how well I understand them. And becoming pure is one of those things.
Humility. Fruitfulness. Purity.
Such wonderful symbolism from a little plant like Lily of the Valley. God always seems to get His message across in the simplest things and in the simplest of ways. He really doesn't work through layers of obscurity and confusion . . . He quietly plants His seed within us and lets the answers unfold through our experience of the world, but only if we care to notice. That's the key. Because it's always our choice to listen or not.
4 comments:
jenna, this is beautiful. i love your comparisons. they are so lovely and so very true. thank you for using your heart to see God's lessons...and for sharing them with others. i am blessed. truly.
living in CA, i do miss the arrival of the spring flowers. i love how you told the order of the blooming.. it reminds me of my MI days... how we waited for the crocus then the daffodil followed by the hyacinths and tulips! and the robins flitting here and there completed the picture of spring! :)
Thanks Sharilyn~
I forget that across the country the seasons look different depending on where someone lives. In the South, the flowers start blooming as early as March . . . very welcome after winter! I wouldn't trade these diverse seasons in the South for anything. It gives me something to look forward to. It's always changing!
Thanks for your words.
~Jenna
whoa! awesome!
The flower, your description and the links to Jesus.
Cool pic too!
I feel enlightened, like i just attended church:)
Hi Hunney. Lily of the Valley is my favorite flower. Now I understand more about why! Thanks for your beautiful words, insights and pictures!
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