Welcome to the

Biblical Garden!

at First Congregational Church

of Fair Haven (Vermont) UCC!


Garden Questions...

and Replies?

Every week we receive questions and comments about Biblical gardens and plants.

We invite you to join the discussion!

Here's some of the most recent dialogs.

If YOU would share a question or suggestion or response , just send an email to hkfamily@sover.net


Where might I find....

I am collecting and growing some Biblical Plants. For a long time I am looking for seeds or plant material of the "Burning Bush", or Rubus Sanguineus. Could you please let me have some Information, where I could find some Seeds or Plant Material?!? Many Thanks for Your Efforts and Your Help in Advance!

Yours faithfully, Christian Schwarze
Bad Oeynhausen, Germany Schwarze97@aol.com


Biblical Garden Seeds

Paul Vonseckendorff <paulvon@hotmail.com> emailed to ask for a

source for Black Mustard seed.

I sent him back searching in the internet and he shares this source!

Rex's Seed Co.

Has lots of Biblical seeds. Take a look!


Will the true mustard plant please stand up?

Question from a visitor:

...Christ spoke of the mustard seed as the tiniest seed from which grows a large tree. This has been puzzling me for a long time, because the mustard seeds we know are definitely NOT the tiniest seeds you can find, and Brassica nigra is an annual, not a tree. However, there is a mustard tree in Israel, Salvadora persica. Its seeds are real tiny, like dust specks. The tree's also known as toothbrush tree. Could that be the tree in question?

Reply:

...you raise a good question.
My primary resource for evaluating what plants are genuinely those of the Bible is a book by Michael Zohary, long-time professor of botany in Jerusalem who wrote a book now out of print called Plants of the Bible.
Zohary is fairly confident that Brassica nigra (black mustard) is the best candidate for the plant to which Jesus referred. It certainly is among the species of Sinapis and Brasica genuses that grow in Israel. The inability to fit our mustard plants into the context of Jesus' story has long troubled commentators and regular Christians.

As for Salvadora persica, I do not know. It is so easy for people to apply a "common" name to a plant without historical or linguistic precedent. Zohary goes to great lengths to explore the identity of plants with the same common name in the middle east, comparing similar sounding names on other Mediterranean languages, so I would doubt that he would have skipped consideration of your proposed plant but he makes no mention of it.

Still, I will be in touch with folks at Neot Kedumim, the Biblical Land Reserve in Israel to see what they think about your suggestion. And I will get back in touch with you. I'll also post your question on our Web site and see what
input I receive.

Marsh

More on mustards...

Curiously, the very next day I received this question

I'm into bonsai as a hobby, and am interested in working with some species with biblical origins. In particular, I'd like to do a bonsai with Brassica nigra, black mustard, because of the gospel references.
Do you know of a source either for an established plant, or seeds?

Reply:

Bonsai biblical plants sounds like fun but I'm afraid that Brassica nigra does not hold a lot of promise. In spite of Jesus' suggestion that mustard grows to be a tree Brassica nigra is a small, leafy plant. The last time I bought the seeds I got them in a 2# bag for making peppery sprouts from Burpees. The leaves - this batch came from a very leafy variety that is a spicy addition to a salad - can also be smaller as on earlier varieties I used to grow from Park Seeds (no longer sold) that looked a lot like buttercups in plant size and shape (much smaller leaves).

Bay Laurel, Dwarf Myrtle, Carob, Dwarf Pomegranate bonsais, I'd love to feature your story on our website. I'd bet others who have limited space - like elders in a nursing home for example, might LOVE the idea. Please stay in touch if you pursue this.
Sorry to pour cold water on your first tree idea. I hope you won't give up on the Bible entering your greenhouse!

The writer responds

Thanks for your response. Indeed, as you point out, this plant is not good for bonsai. However, a person on the IBC (Internet Bonsai Club) suggested that the tree Jesus was referring to might be Salvadora persica, known in Africa as the "toothbrush tree." It is small and twisted, I understand. I haven't seen a pic yet. Have you heard of this?

Any one of you have a picture or information to share???

Discussion participants (with their permission): Ulli Bauer <ulli.bauer@epost.de> and Craig Cowing <ccowing@frontiernet.net>

August 11th 2002

For an exceedingly wise and thorough discussion of these possibilities,

please go to the photo and research material from Lytton John Musselman:

http://web.odu.edu/webroot/instr/sci/plant.nsf/pages/mustard

It directly addresses these questions and more.

The Latest update (Aug. 19th) from Neot Kedumim, the Biblical Landscape Preserve in Israel:

Helen Frenkley writes: ...let me share the information I gleaned from Nogah Hareuveni regarding the mustard seed quandary.
There is a story in the Babylonian Talmud (Ktubot 111b) that goes as follows: “Rabbi Yosef told of an event in a place called Shikhin. A man inherited three branches of a mustard plant from his father. One of them split open revealing nine kavim of mustard [seeds], and with its wood [lumber] he built the roof of the potter’s shed.”

The kav is a biblical measure, which, according to the renowned biblical archaeologist, Professor William Albright, is equal to 1.22 liters. Therefore 9 kavim equal just under 11 liters – almost three gallons! - of mustard seeds.

Whether exaggerated prose or poetic license, it is of interest that both the Talmud and the New Testament refer to the lowly mustard plant as something that will grow to great size, whether for birds to perch on, for building material, or as a source of truly fantastic yields. At Neot Kedumim, we see mustard plants grow to a height that allow small birds to perch on the stalk, but we've not used the dried stalks for thatch, or harvested measurable yields of mustard seeds.

As for the “bonsai” suggestion, in Israel Salvadora persica grows only in the area of Ein Gedi in the region of the Dead Sea. It is, therefore, not a common plant and would not have found its way easily into New Testament parables and Talmudic homilies. We at Neot Kedumim stick to Brassica nigra or Brassica alba as the most logical candidates.

Further Thoughts about the mustard seed Parable...

From what I understand, the listeners to Jesus would have been just as confused about mustard seeds growing into trees as the people who are trying to grow mustard trees in their gardens in the 2nd Millenium AD. From what I have been taught, the proper interpretation of this parable is that the mustard seed does not grow into a tree "naturally". For it to grow into a tree it would have to be a supernatural occurence. Jesus was painting a picture of a supernatural work of God, so that his listeners would invision a supernatural mustard tree that was like nothing they had ever seen before.
As he was talking in this parable they would have been saying "huh, a mustard tree? Any bird sitting on it's branches would crush the little bush", but at the end of the parable they would be saying "Wow, the kingdom of heaven is really going to be beyond anything we have ever seen before."

Dean Babuin pammyba@telus.net


What are the CORRECT plants for my Bible garden?

Here is a recent discussion, and again your input is invited. We will pass it along to the questioner if you're willing.

We have a lavender plant called "Sarah," it will not be a huge plant and I will be growing it in a nice pot that looks a little "Mediterranean." Do you have a specific biblical reference that you use for your lavender? I understand that the 'Spike' lavender is sometimes referred as spikenard and that lavender can also be 'Nard'? (Song of Solomon and Mark?)

Also since we are in a very different climate from the 'Biblical' areas is it correct to compromise some plants? I know that the cedar tree is huge! There are some very small shrub like plant called 'Dwarf moss cedar' could this be used in place of the 'real' thing?

Reply:

The nard of the Bible is clearly Nardostychys jatamansi, and was imported from India during Biblical times (Michael Zohary: Plants of the Bible, p. 205). It is a member of the genus Valeriana.

Lavendar is a member of the Lamiaceae, but it does share a gift of wonderful aroma and a shape not unlike sage, a Biblical plant because its shape may well have inspired the shape of the menorah. Nigel Hepper in Planting a Biblical Garden, p. 41 commends french lavender, and in his Baker Encyclopedia of Biblical Plants, p. 130, Hepper says he has seen it on sale in Arab markets in Jerusalem and Tiberias. It is definitely a plant that inhabits the Holy Land and Sarah certainly has a pivotal role in the Bible, even though this does not literally make lavender a biblical plant, as in being in the Bible. So you are stretching but it is not an unrelated stretch!

Now for cedars, I so wish I could get my hands on a Cedrus lebani. Indeed C. lebani var. sargenti can be trained to make a bush and so certainly can be kept smaller than the 100' potential of the unbridaled tree. I have seen several of these at the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens and they are LOVELY.

A 10 ft high C. lebani var. sargenti growing at the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens

C. deodara, C. brevifolia (hard to find), and C. atlantica all grow to about 100' feet if allowed to mature. They also grow substantial roots. Sadly, St. John the Divine biblical garden in New York had to saw down their lovely C. lebani because the roots were destroying part of the church. It was a sad day.

Nigel Hepper in Planting... says that plants not from the genus Cedrus, even though called cedars, have no relationship to C. lebani. For example, our church has many arbor vitae "cedars"growing on the property. They are NOT members of the cedrus genus, but they are already here so we make the most of them.

I also wonder what the connection of a dwarf bush would be to the great cedars of Lebanon? But I have the same wonderment about our Thuja occidentalis (arbor vitae). So I guess I'm not a great encourager of the shrub. I definitely compromise on selecting plants, but I try to stick with plants that are botanical cousins - of the same genus - and bear a strong resemblance to the plant of the Bible so people who view the substitute will get a sense of the real biblical plant. But that's just my take. Every gardener is given authority over their own garden - hopefully seeking God's leading!!

When you are looking for books my all-time favorite is Michael Zohary's Plants of the Bible. More easily available and more liberal interpretation are Nigel Hepper's books. Allan Swenson has some very interesting books IN PRINT. Plants of the Bible is fun, and coming soom are two other titles: Flowers of the Bible and Herbs of the Bible.

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