According to GlobalTreeSearch, there are 60,065 species of trees. Genesis 2:9 talks of another kind of tree: "the tree of life in the midst of the garden and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil."
God commanded Adam and Eve not to eat the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of
good and evil, but they ate it, and their disobedience brought about exile and
death.
Nevertheless, we believe that the tree of life was recovered through the
providence of God and the tree of the cross that Jesus carried.
To Jews and some other people, the cross was an obstacle and foolishness, but
to the faithful, it became "the power and the wisdom of God" (1Cor
1:24) revealing the mystery of God's merciful love. Thus, the cross became the
symbol of salvation filled with abundant love.
We have seen various illustrations of the cross of Jesus. As a cruel tool of
the death penalty, crucifixion was a sign of condemnation, fear, and aversion
at the times of Jesus. However, thanks to the humble sacrifice of Jesus on the
cross, the tree of the cross became the tree of life.
"Tree of life" (Albero della vita) is an illustration with Tempera
and gold on a pentagonal panel the size of 248×151cm by Pacino di Bonaguida
(1280-1340), an Italian painter, illuminator, and miniaturist in Florence in
the first half of the fourteenth century.
Pacino painted altarpieces, miniatures, and decorations for illuminated
manuscripts. Illustrating Jesus hung on the tree of the cross with 12 branches,
Pacino described the tree of the cross as the tree of life.
In each circle between the branches, the dynamic Biblical stories are
illustrated in a form of a miniaturist, which was practiced to let the Bible be
known to the illiterate poor who were not able to buy books in the Middle Ages.
Influenced by "lignum vitae" (tree of life, 1259), a literary work of
the Franciscan devotion to the humanity of Christ by Saint Bonaventura
(1217-1274), Pacino illustrated the tree of life with 12 branches and 47 fruits
to describe the salvation story of Jesus from his birth, growth, passion,
death, resurrection, and ascension.
The circle also reminds us of the host in the Eucharist. The sacrifice of Jesus
to attain human salvation is symbolized in the "Pelican," a bird of
piety wounding its own breast to feed its chicks, illustrated in the middle on
top of the tree.
On the upper part of the tree, Moses and John are illustrated: Genesis 2:9 is
inscribed in the scroll of Moses, and Revelation 22:2 is inscribed in the
scroll of St. John.
At the bottom of the tree, Prophets Ezekiel and Daniel, Saints Francis and
Clara are illustrated: Galatians 6:14 is inscribed in the scroll of St.
Francis; Ezekiel 47:12 in that of Ezekiel; Daniel 4:8 in that of Daniel; Song
of Solomon 1:12 in that of St. Clara.
At the bottom of the tree of the cross, the stories of the creation of human
beings as well as their corruption and exile are illustrated.
The tree of life has been an important topic to meditate upon since time
eternal. Even now, the tree of life and death as well as the culture of life
and death are existing in front of us.
The Korea Times/ thoughts of the Times/
August 2(online), 3(offline), 2020
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