The Hope Of Life From Death

 

This life from death is everywhere. I’m constantly being reminded of it.

In April I planted flowers as I do every year. I always have great intentions, but my husband is usually the one who ends up taking care of them. Instead of having a green thumb, mine is brownish-black.

This year, I bought two lilies and planted them in large pots, then set them on either side of my front door. They were large and pink and beautiful. And they lived for all of about three weeks. That’s when the blooms started falling off, and the green leaves started turning brown.

We set the lilies closer to the edge of the porch, hoping they’d catch sun and rain. They’ve been there for weeks now, a little green and a little brown. And, honestly, I’ve been waiting on them to die.

As I walked by the front door this morning, something pink caught my eye. There was a flower in that lily pot. I went to inspect, and discovered that it wasn’t a lily. I snapped a picture and texted it to my mother-in-law , asking her what find of flower it was. She responded that it was a petunia, and asked if I planted some in that pot last year. I responded that I may have. I can’t say for sure. She said they must’ve come back up.

Upon further inspection of the pot, I discovered that while the top of the lily was brown, there were new blooms at the base of the plant. Little, bright green leaves bursting through blackish buds.

New life from what I thought to be dead.

An unexpected, little gift of a pink flower rising through the dirt in what looked to me like a pot of death.

And the offering of hope that what was planted, abandoned, and seems dead can come back new and better.

 

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Comments

  1. Lynn Morrissey says:

    Oh, take great hope in what you are seeing, Rebekah, . . . signs of life from death, resurrection of dreams from seeing them dashed. God is speaking to you!!! God has always given me hope to see life spring from the winter tree (I think that is how Augustine was first aware of new life in Christ–don’t quote me, but I thnk so and you could easily Google this. If not, he then some other well-known saint of the Lord). God has similarlly given me hope via butterflies, lilies, amaryllises, etc. And here i s a post of mine about new life. I am so encouraged by your post Rebekah, and I know God is encouraging you!
    Love
    Lynn
    http://kelrohlf.wordpress.com/2013/03/26/eastering-by-lynn-d-morrissey-guest-post/

    • Lynn, thanks for sharing your post with me. It’s a beautiful reminder this morning that “death is not the end.” Thank you!

  2. Thank you, Rebekah. I continue to be blessed by your posts. A reminder that the irreversible actually can, and will be, reversed. Shalom, sister.