by
Damien F. Mackey
According to a
Midrashic tradition, Noah’s dove brought back an olive branch from the holy Mount
of Olives.
The
dove is used as a symbol of the Holy Spirit, as we read, for instance, at: https://iconreader.wordpress.com/2013/06/30/the-holy-spirit-as-a-dove-in-iconography/
Saint
Gregory of Nazianzus says of the
Holy Spirit’s appearance as a dove at Christ’s baptism:
And the Spirit
comes as a dove, for he honours the body being seen “corpreally”, since He is
also God by divinization. And since long ago the dove has been accustomed to
announcing the good news of the flood’s end.
– Oration on the
Holy Lights, 381 A.D.
Here,
St Gregory sees the dove sent out by Noah from the ark as a foreshadowing of
the Holy Spirit’s descent as a dove at Christ’s baptism. This is unsurprising,
as overwhelmingly the Holy Fathers, starting with the Apostle Peter, interpret
the Flood as a prefiguration of Christian baptism: the righteous Noah and his
family saved through water. St John of Damascus says more or less the
same thing, and adds:
Olive oil is
employed in baptism as a significant of our anointing, and as making us
anointed, and as announcing to us through the Holy Spirit God’s pity: for it
was the fruit of the olive that the dove brought to those who were saved from
the flood. (Gen 8:11)
-An Exposition
of the Orthodox Faith (Book IV)
Here, the
physical, created, dove that Noah sent out is seen as a symbol of the Holy
Spirit, carrying the anointing (olive branch). St Bede the Venerable
writes:
The olive branch
with green leaves is the grace of the Holy Spirit, rich in the words of life,
the fullness of which rests on Christ… And by a most beautiful conjunction, the
figure is in agreement with the fulfillment: a corporeal dove brought the olive
branch to the Ark which was washed by the waters of the Flood; the Holy Spirit
descended in the form of a corporeal dove upon the Lord when He was baptized in
the waters of the Jordan.
-Homilies on the
Gospels
St
Cyril of Jerusalem says the same,
associating Noah with a prefiguration of Christ: “the dove returned to
[Noah]… thus, say they, the Holy Ghost also descended upon the true Noah
[Christ].” St Cyril also teaches, when considering why the Holy Spirit
might appear specifically as a dove at Christ’s baptism, a more general
symbolism between the Holy Spirit and the dove:
…perhaps He came
down in the form of a dove, as some say, to exhibit a figure of that dove who
is pure and innocent and un-defiled, and also helps the prayers for the
children she has begotten, and for forgiveness of sins.
-Catechetical
Lecture 17
Now,
according to a Rabbinic tradition, Noah’s dove obtained its olive branch from Mount
Olivet. Thus we read: https://onej.org/touring-jewish-history-atop-the-mount-of-olives-in-jerusalem/
Why
is the mountain holy?
When
the Temple stood, the sacrifice of the Para Aduma (the Red Heifer) was done on
the Mount of Olives, which – in keeping with the Biblical tradition – was
“outside of the camp,” and was facing “the front of the Tent of Meeting”
(Numbers 19:2-4). Also, the new month was announced by lighting a fire at its
summit. Rabbinic commentators say that the olive branch that the dove brought
to Noah was from the Mount of Olives. It’s interesting to note that olive trees
only thrive up to the elevation of the Mount of Olives (approximately 800
meters), which was a sign to Noah that the waters had not just receded, but had
receded to a particular elevation. Until the Romans sieged the city in 70 [AD]
and cut down most of the trees, the entire mountain was covered with olive
trees.
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