Plant Fig Trees: Spread Peace and Prosperity
By Mohamad Ali Awdi,
Head of the Layalty to Lebanon Movement
Let us make Lebanon an oasis of peace for
Christians and Muslims. Let us make others envy us for what we have. Let us make tourism a
step for a better Lebanon for the years to come. People of Lebanon, I want you all to
plant fig, olive and Cedar trees in front of your houses. Plant for peace and prosperity
and for health and development. I started the process myself in front of my office as I
planted 10 trees and I will plant 50 more in front of my house in Housh Sneid, Riyak Road,
Baalbeck. With this, I plan to begin the log journey of planting tens of thousands of
trees across Lebanon. It is a step forward, and will be followed by other steps.
Environment, agriculture and tourism is synonymous with Lebanon. So, I ask you all to
plant in front of your houses, in your offices, fig trees, olive trees and Cedar trees.
May peace and prosperity come to you, your families and all Lebanon.
Why Fig Trees
The Fig Tree Fig trees are native to The
Mediterranean area, although they may be found more extensively from Asiatic Turkey to
northern India. Today, they are also found growing on a commercial basis in numerous other
countries around the world. They are also often grown as large decorative potted trees in
greenhouses or "sun rooms" in cold climates.
Fig Tree The fig plant is cultivated as a bush from 1 meter
(3 feet) tall, to large trees over 10 meters (33 feet) tall. Their wide, coarse deciduous
leaves are easily identified. The sweet fruit develops above the points of shed leaves, or
in the axil of leaves of the current year, with one or two figs set together. Depending
upon local temperature and rainfall, there may be one or two crops harvested per year.
Figs have been a major food for people of the Mediterranean and
Middle East for thousands of years. Their ability to store easily by drying made them,
along with various grains and raisins, a dependable long-term food source. The same can
just as truly be said about them today.
Figs are mentioned from beginning to end throughout The
Bible, all the way from the Seven Days Of Creation in Genesis, to Revelation. They were in
the Garden of Eden at the time of The Creation Of Adam And Eve, and the birth of Cain And
Abel, and they are used as a symbol in end-time Prophecy. Virtually everyone in the Bible
ate, or at least was familiar with, figs.
- Figs were used as a sign of peace and prosperity, "each
man under his own vine and fig tree" (1 Kings 4:25).
- King Hezekiah's life-threatening infection was cured by
"a poultice of figs" (2 Kings 20:7).
- Figs were stored in "pressed cakes" (1 Samuel
30:12).
- Jesus Christ put a curse on a fig tree that was in full leaf
but had no fruit, as a good productive tree should have had by that time of the season
(Matthew 21:18-22).
- James used figs to describe appropriate Christian Living -
"can a fig tree bear olives?" (James 3:12).
- Figs are used to symbolize a great end-time meteor storm
that will occur as part of the prophesied Signs In The Heavens - "The sun turned
black like sackcloth made of goat hair, the whole moon turned blood red, and the stars
(i.e. meteorites] in the sky fell to earth, as late figs drop from a fig tree when shaken
by a strong wind." (Revelation 6:12-13).
- Figs are mentioned in the Koran along with olives when it
said: And the fig and the olive tree and the years to come and the secure country.
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