For most of my childhood, I lived in Missouri, a state that looks very different from where I currently reside. The towering oaks surrounded me, and I loved hiking beneath their shade. However, it was the gentle dogwood trees, peeping out from between the stately oaks, that caught my eye each spring. Their soft, white blossoms were a beautiful contrast to the fresh green in the budding leaves of the other trees. Missouri landscape is dotted with dogwoods wherever you go.
The dogwood tree, however, grabbed my attention even more when I learned of the Legend of the Dogwood. While there is no proof this legend has any factual details to it, I can recognize the symbolic aspects related to the Dogwood tree and its blossoms. Whether the cross was actually created from a Dogwood tree was not the point. Looking at the snowy blossoms brought to mind my crucified Lord, and thus they became a favorite tree of mine.
Instead the tree would remain slender and bent, not large enough to act as a cross.
+ The dogwood blossoms would be in the form of a cross: two long and two short petals.
+ In the center of the outer edge of each petal there will be nail prints -- brown with rust and stained with red, the color of our Lord's blood.
+ In the center of each flower would be found a crown of thorns.
**All who see the tree with its shape and marks would remember the Crucifixion of Our Lord.