Easter Thistles
Guest Writer: Eve Turek
“Cursed is the ground for your sake;
In toil you shall eat of it
All the days of your life.
Both thorns and thistles it shall bring forth for you,
And you shall eat the herb of the field.”— Gen. 3: 17b-18 (NIV)
Easter Swallowtails and Thistles
My contemplation of the Easter story this year gave me new insights. In Genesis, we learn that humankind’s beginnings of a conscious, pure connection with God and with this earth began in a garden. I think a lot about this story because my given name is Eve. In the Eden story, humankind lost the close relationship with God as Creator and the tender, loving stewardship of this earth. Curses were spoken. Humans not only acquired knowledge of evil; they could—and did—choose evil. The ramifications extended upward, outward, and downward. In the story, one of the things God declared from that garden as humans were leaving it was that the earth itself would reap the consequences of their choices and would now produce something that had never grown before in that original garden, thorns and thistles.
Fast-forward, and we see Jesus praying in agony, knowing what he was about to endure and being betrayed by one of his closest friends, in a garden.
The next afternoon, His own story seemed to end as His body was removed from a cross and placed in someone else’s family tomb… in a garden.
I don’t think the location of that tomb was a coincidence. I think the parallels are too striking to ignore. The miracle that followed in that garden reversed everything that had gone wrong in the first garden. When Jesus rose, life triumphed over death, light overwhelmed darkness, and everything associated with humanity’s knowledge of evil, including the fear, the shame, and the curse, found a remedy in that rising.
With all of these thoughts in my head and heart, after an early service at Saint Andrews, I drove out to Alligator River refuge. I was seeking an Easter-inspired image that might illustrate them. Maybe I should see if the Elizabethan Gardens was open on my way home, I thought.
And then I found the thistles.
Early last week at the refuge, I noticed the swallowtail butterflies had arrived, and I worried for them because I know their favorite plant is thistle and very few had bloomed yet. It seemed too early for the swallowtails to be here without the plants that sustain them. But on Easter Sunday morning, in all the places I know to look, thistles had sprung up in just a few days and were in full flower. And look! The one specific plant that was mentioned, incorporated into the pronouncement of curses the Earth itself must bear, has instead become the source of sustenance for these beautiful swallowtail butterflies—creatures often associated with symbols of resurrection, of spring, of new beginnings, of Easter itself. Jesus is Risen, and that changes everything.
Alleluia, Alleluia.
Eve Turek
Joanna joannaseibert.com