An artificial plant looks impressive. But it produces nothing.
You could easily buy one thinking it will bring life to any room. And sure, it brings the appearance of life. The leaves stay green. They never drop. It never needs water. In fact, if you tried to water it, the only thing that would grow is mold. From across the room, you'd swear it's thriving. Up close, it's plastic. No oxygen, no growth, no fruit. All appearance, zero substance.
Here's the thing about artificial plants: they're perfect for people who want the look without the life. Who want to appear to have a green thumb without actually growing anything. They're safe. Predictable. Dead.
That's exactly what Jesus finds when He walks up to the fig tree in Mark 11. The tree is covered in leaves, which in that culture was an advertisement. Fig trees produce fruit before or alongside their leaves, so a leafy tree was making a promise: food available here. Jesus walks over, reaches into the branches, searches through the leaves. Nothing. Not one bud. Just leaves pretending to be productive.
And that fruitless tree is Mark's way of diagnosing the entire religious system Jesus is about to confront in the temple. The temple looked busy. The sacrifices never stopped. The Pharisees could quote Scripture backwards. But where was the fruit God actually wanted? All leaves. No figs. Religion with the lights on and nobody home.
The artificial plant is a perfectly reasonable choice if all you want is the appearance of something living. Jesus isn't interested in that. He wants the real thing.