St Oswald's Magazine StOM 1607 | Page 5

Remind them of these things, and solemnly charge them in the presence of God not to wrangle about words, which is useless and leads to the ruin of the hearers. 2 Tim 2:14. Lesley-ann X+X ROSES The Maygold rose outside my window has been in full bloom for two months now, it came from Cockers in Aberdeen – the Scottish climate is good for roses. In the beginning of the Christian tradition, roses were seen as a pagan symbol, but later on this Queen of Flowers was victorious not only in gardens but also in symbolism. I would like to take you on a couple of visits to old and new rose miracles. There is a Bible garden in a place called Barth near Stralsund at the Baltic coast. It seems to specialise in Christmas Roses. These are actually not roses, but hellebores, but since they open their flowers around Christmas time, according to popular belief they belong to the miracle flowers. Their flowering was understood as a sign of paradise in the middle of winter and was put in relation to the birth of Christ. The Church was originally not very keen on roses, they do not feature in the New Testament, although at the time of Christ’s birth wild roses grew in Palestine. Yet in Egyptian, in GreekRoman and in Germanic mythology they play a big part. The goddess Aphrodite was said to have stepped into the thorns of a rose, when she hurried to the side of her dying lover Adonis, which made the white flower turn red, and the Germanic goddess Frigga had roses planted round her sanctuary which were supposed to help with childbirth. Our next destination is the courtyard of the cathedral in Hildesheim, Germany. It contains a miracle rose. During the Middle Ages the rose was lifted up into a high position within Christian symbolism. One of the reasons for this are legends about roses, like the one concerning the Emperor Louis the Pious, who in 815 AD got lost in the forest and hung his cross with an image of the Virgin Mary on a bush and prayed for delivery. When he awoke after hours he found that bush covered in roses, while snow had fallen all around him. He pledged to build a chapel on the spot, from which later the cathedral arose, which is dedicated to the Virgin. The rosebush in the courtyard there is said to be 1000 years old, and even during the second world war another miracle occurred around it. StOM Page 5