Over the next month, I'll be offering thoughts on the Nativity set
model, a large papercraft crèche that you can find and download here:
Advent Calendar Day 18: The Cherry Tree
The cherry tree has come to be associated with Christmas
through the Cherry Tree carol, a six hundred year-old ballad set during Mary
and Joseph’s journey to Bethlehem. In
it, Mary, passing under a cherry tree, gets a pregnancy craving for one, and
asks Joseph to reach up and grab her one.
Joseph, either doubting her tale of divine conception or not yet having
been told of it (both versions exist), tells her that if she wants a cherry so
bad then she ought to have the baby daddy get one for her. At this the cherry tree bends down to allow
Mary to pluck a cherry from its branch.
Joseph either then repents of his momentary doubt and spitefulness, or
an angel appears and tells Joseph of Mary’s miraculous, dadless pregnancy.
This story stems from yet another apocryphal infancy gospel,
but doesn’t have a Christmas or pre-Christmas setting. It’s set later, during the flight to
Egypt. Mary’s craving isn’t a natal
whim, but a nutritional necessity, and Joseph is upset over his inability to
provide the family with food or drink in the desert, their supplies of both
exhausted. The tree, not cherry but date,
is called upon by little Jesus to bend down and give them fruit. Also its roots break the surface and provide
plenty of water.
This is one of the many lil’ Jesus miracles.
The drawing here is, like in the carol, a cherry tree
intended for a Christmas setting. I like the idea that the tree, its sentience
activated, wished to continue it is worship, and followed them, providing food
and shade and standing really still when anyone else was looking.
Don’t throw your back out lifting dead trees. Check out tree service queens!
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