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CULTIVATE HEALTHY

An information area for news concerning nutrition, the wellness and culture related to olive oil. What we publish are neither regulations nor medical advice but a collection of information distributed on the web or received by the editorial department, so we always invite to a subsequent verification. Good learning trip!

Since the time of the Bible, the olive tree symbolises sacredness

With its leaves shimmering, silvery, thin and regular, whose delicate lines are emphasized by the branches and gnarled trunk, the olive tree is a kind of sculpture in the collective imagination shaped by nature itself; also why, in the history it has been a constant source of inspiration for artists, as well as a symbolic representation of virtue, dogmas, images, feelings. When you consider that olive oil is mentioned in the Bible about two hundred times, both as regards daily use, both for sacred uses more closely, you can see how the olive tree is part of the history of ‘ humanity. From its material importance derives its sacred significance, much to directly symbolize the blessing of God (Deuteronomy 11: 13-17). Associated in the sacred texts frequently at the party (Ps 104: 15), the use of olive oil gives sacredness and authority to the priests, prophets, kings and important guests. In the Old Testament, the term “anointed” is often synonymous with “holy” and means a person, often regal figure chosen to fulfill a certain task of prestige. Hence the direct connection of the greek word Christos to the figure of Jesus (Jn 1, 41; 4,25; Acts 4: 24-27). Olive oil is always present in Catholic sacraments of baptism, confirmation, and extreme unction, in the liturgical gestures, providing for use in priestly and episcopal ordinations. Tradition has it that the cross on which Jesus died was made of olive wood.

Source: www.teatronaturale.it