Everyone shall eat roast lamb that night, with unleavened bread and bitter herbs. Exodus 12:8 TLB
Each spring when the grass turns green and those pesky
little yellow flowers appear in my lawn once again, I am reminded of my mother
and of the dandelion greens she served for dinner when I was growing up.
However, as a student of the plants of the Bible, I am also reminded that
dandelions symbolize the suffering of our Lord Jesus Christ.
There is perhaps no meal in all history more worthy of
remembering than the Passover meal Jesus ate with His disciples during the week
we now call Holy Week. Exodus 12:8, quoted above, describes the foods which are
to make up the Passover celebration. It was the custom of the ancient Hebrews
to eat five bitter herbs with their unleavened bread and lamb. Many herbs have
been mentioned, but most botanists believe the five herbs to have been lettuce,
endive, chicory, mint, and dandelion. Today we would probably refer to them as
salad.
I no longer eat dandelions for dinner, but each spring as
they appear in my lawn, I feel a sense of wonder that they were likely among
the bitter herbs Jesus ate with His paschal lamb during Passover almost 2,000
years ago. When dandelions dot our landscape, they serve as a gentle reminder
that our Lord Jesus Christ suffered and died for us. He became our Paschal
Lamb, the Lamb Who takes away the sin of the world.
Prayer: Dear heavenly Father, we are so saddened when we
think of that Last Supper and of Jesus' suffering and death on the cross, but
we are eternally grateful that He came to save us from our sin. In His holy
name we pray. Amen.
Judy Welch (originally shared on the Presbyterian Church of
Canada devotional page)
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