Monday, July 31, 2006

Giant Sequoia

In 1893, a train passed through Mt. Angel, Oregon. A Benedictine sister with sharp eyes was walking by the railroad tracks when she noticed that two tree seedlings had fallen off the train. Giant Sequoia seedlings. She took them back to the monastery and carefully planted them north and south of the monastery entrance. The nuns supplemented nature's water with dishwater, urging the seedlings to grow. The south tree eventually died, but the north tree is now the largest tree in Mt. Angel, towering over the monastery complex.

Some years ago, some young college men with a temporary brain dysfunction decided to pull a prank. They climbed the tree at night, carrying saws. When they were almost to the top they began sawing off limbs. They stripped an entire section of the tree, leaving a pile of limbs scattered around the base of tree. The nuns were heartbroken, and the young men got into major trouble.

Neither fines nor suspensions from school nor repentance can restore tree limbs. The perfect symmetry of the tree was broken. But the tree has continued to grow, and as the years pass, the limbless section of the tree is gradually being covered up with growing limbs from above. The tree is forever altered, but it is healing, and it is the official symbol of Queen of Angels Monastery--because of its flaws, and because it is a sign of the possibility of healing. What better background for a cross?

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