Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Resurrection


Recently, I was listening to a podcast of an episode of "On Being", Krista Tippett's radio show that she describes as "...a spacious conversation — and an evolving media space — about the big questions at the center of human life, from the boldest new science of the human brain to the most ancient traditions of the human spirit." She was talking with Vigen Guroian, who is a professor of religious studies in Orthodox Christianity at the University of Virginia. In the course of the show, Krista described Mr. Guroian's background further and discussed some of his published works. From one on of them, she shared the following story about gardening and resurrection that I found to be both touching and enlightening:

"Several summers ago, my children found two turtles and put them in the vegetable garden. During a thaw the next February, as I was digging up the soggy soil where the peas go, I lifted a heavy mound with my shovel, and then another. The two turtles had burrowed down for winter sleep, and I had rudely awakened them too soon. So I carried them to a corner of the garden where I would not disturb them and dug them in again. When my wife said that she feared the turtles might be dead, I said I did not think so (though I wasn't as sure as I sounded). I insisted that in spring, they would come up. And they did in Easter week.

Lilies and hyacinths signify the resurrection, and I can understand why. But I have a pair of turtles that plant themselves in my garden each fall like two gigantic seeds and rise on Easter with earthen crowns upon their humbled heads. With the women at the tomb, I marvel."

From "Inheriting Paradise" by Vigen Guroian.