The Perfect Easter Flower

In the forests of the Pacific Northwest, among the ferns and huckleberry bushes, one can occasionally  encounter a wildflower, Trillium ovatum, that I consider to be the perfect flower for Easter. It is usually solitary and very fragile. It blooms about Easter time and must be shared. If it is plucked and taken home for one’s own pleasure, the plant will die, never to flower again. It has three leaves and three petals representing the Trinity, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Initially the flower is white representing purity, the perfect sacrificial lamb, but then the petals turn to a deep purple, the color of the royal robes of a King. In the summer it withers and appears to die back to the ground, only to bloom the following Spring, to return again. On many levels it appears to be a symbol of what we believe in: a triune God, a Son who was perfect and the perfect sacrifice for our sins and who now is our King, seated at the right hand of God the Father. He will come again.

He is risen!

He is risen indeed!

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