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Lily of the Field

Plants & Trees

The wildflower Jesus pointed to as proof of God's lavish care and a cure for anxiety.

The “lilies of the field” were the abundant wildflowers that blanketed the Galilean hillsides in spring — likely anemones and similar blooms — brilliant for a short season before being cut for fuel.

Their beauty was effortless and God-given: “they toil not, neither do they spin.” In the Song of Solomon the lily is also a figure of the beloved's loveliness, and a sign of the land's fragile, given beauty.

Jesus used them to dismantle worry: if God clothes short-lived field flowers more gloriously than Solomon in all his robes, “shall he not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith?” The lily preaches that the God who decorates a meadow he knows will be burned tomorrow is certainly attentive to the needs of his children.