Type of leaves seen in many paintings of Adam and Eve

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Fig.

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Random information on the term ” Fig”:

The cursing of the fig tree is an incident reported in the Synoptic Gospels, presented in Mark and Matthew as a miracle in connection with the entry into Jerusalem, and in Luke as a parable. The image is taken from the Old Testament symbol of the fig tree representing Israel, and the cursing of the fig tree in Mark and Matthew and the parallel story in Luke are thus symbolically directed against the Jews, who have not accepted Jesus as Messiah. The gospel of John omits the incident entirely and shifts the event with which it is connected, the cleansing of the temple, from the end of Jesus’ career to the beginning.

In the Jewish scriptures, the people of Israel are sometimes represented as figs on a fig tree (Hosea 9:10, Jeremiah 24), or a fig tree that bears no fruit (Jeremiah 8:13). In Micah 4:4, the age of the messiah is pictured as one in which each man would sit under his fig tree without fear. The cursing of the fig tree in Mark and Matthew and the parallel story in Luke are thus symbolically directed against the Jews, who did not accept Jesus as king. At first sight, the destruction of the fig tree does not seem to fit Jesus’ behaviour elsewhere (and Bertrand Russell used the tale to dispute the greatness of Jesus), but the miracle stories are directed against property rather than people, and form a “prophetic act of judgement”.

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