Gospel for April 5, 2020 (Liturgy of the Palms)

Note from Celeste:

Before we look at today’s lectionary reading, I’d like to draw your attention to my Holy Week Bible Study book.

Go and Find a Donkey is the latest installment of the Choose This Day Multiple Choice Bible Studies series.

The daily devotionals take 10-15 minutes and include:

  • Scripture passage (World English Bible)
  • Fun, entertaining multiple choice questions focused directly on the Scripture passage
  • Short meditation that can be used as a discussion starter.

Use them on the suggested dates, or skip around.  Designed to be used during Holy Week, this nine-day Bible study takes you from Palm Sunday through Easter Monday.

Use this book personally during a coffee break or with the family in the car or at the breakfast table.

Order Go and Find a Donkey  today to prepare your family for this year’s Easter season!
CLICK HERE for Amazon’s Kindle book of Go and Find a Donkey.
CLICK HERE for Amazon’s Paperback of Go and Find a Donkey.

AND NOW, BACK TO TODAY’S LECTIONARY READING:

Palm Sunday painting in the Parish Church of Zirl, Austria.

Fresco in the Parish Church of Zirl, Austria.

START WITH SCRIPTURE:
Matthew 21:1-11
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Jesus approaches the climax of his earthly ministry.  He has been moving inexorably and deliberately toward Jerusalem.  His pilgrimage there coincides with the annual feast of the Passover, but this week’s events will be the setting for a new “Act” in the Drama of Salvation.

Jesus and his disciples are coming into Jerusalem from the east.  Bethsphage is a village on the east slope of the Mount of Olives not far from Bethany where Jesus’ friends Lazarus, Mary and Martha live.  Bethsphage is roughly two miles from Jerusalem.

It is in Bethsphage that Jesus sends two disciples to find a donkey and her colt tied.  Has he made prior arrangements for these animals, or does he have supernatural insight?  In any event, the “password” to be used by his disciples if anyone objects is direct:

If anyone says anything to you, you shall say, ‘The Lord needs them,’ and immediately he will send them.

One thing is clear — this is a prophetic act.  Jesus knows that when he rides into Jerusalem, it is a conscious fulfillment of Zechariah 9:9:

Tell the daughter of Zion,
behold, your King comes to you,
humble, and riding on a donkey,
on a colt, the foal of a donkey.

In one sense this is a religious act — but it is also a political statement.  When he rides into Jerusalem on the back of the donkey, he is claiming to be King — Messiah.  This is a challenge to the religious establishment in Jerusalem.  The priests and Pharisees will also present his claim to be King to Governor Pilate as a threat to the Roman military jurisdiction.

The multitude — no doubt aware of the rumors of Jesus’ miracles in Galilee and near Jerusalem — are immediately caught up in a fever of expectation.

A very great multitude spread their clothes on the road. Others cut branches from the trees, and spread them on the road.

Waving branches was a familiar practice during the Feast of Booths, which occurs in the autumn (cf. Leviticus 23:39-43). During this time, Israel was to dwell in tents (booths) made of branches in order to remember that they had been wanderers in the wilderness after their deliverance from slavery in Egypt.  But this is Passover, celebrated in the spring.  Why does the crowd wave them now?

One speculation leads us back to the prophet Zechariah, particularly his apocalyptic oracles.  In Zechariah 14, the prophet envisions a time when Yahweh will triumph over the nations that oppress Israel.  The prophecy describes Yahweh standing on the Mount of Olives to the east of Jerusalem, and the Mount of Olives itself is split by an earthquake. But ultimately every nation that remains will pay homage and tribute to Jerusalem:

 It will happen that everyone who is left of all the nations that came against Jerusalem will go up from year to year to worship the King, Yahweh of Armies, and to keep the feast of tents (Zechariah 14:16).

It may well be that when the more Biblically literate members of the crowds that day in Jerusalem saw Jesus riding on a donkey, they began to put two and two together.  If Jesus was the Messiah, then the time may have come for the Messianic celebration of the Feast of Booths!  And once a few people broke off the branches to wave, it became contagious with the rest of the crowd.

This seems confirmed when the crowd begins to shout:

Hosanna to the son of David! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord! Hosanna in the highest!

Hosanna may be interpreted save us now! This is a prayer for help that might be reserved for the Messiah of God, who comes in the name of the Lord.  But the real confirmation is in calling Jesus son of David.  David’s royal dynasty was the house of Judah, of which Jesus was a descendant.  And of course David’s royal line was expected to return to power, as Yahweh had promised David nearly 1000 years earlier:

Your house and your kingdom will be made sure forever before you. Your throne will be established forever (2 Samuel 7:16).

This is not merely a religious promise — this is unmistakably a political statement.  The Messiah was to come as a King and re-establish David’s kingdom.

And yet again, someone knowledgeable in the Scriptures quotes a verse from Psalm 118:26 that becomes a catchphrase for the crowd:

Blessed is he who comes in Yahweh’s name!

They may have missed the poignancy of their quote from Psalm 118, which describes the suffering and near-death of the narrator of the Psalm at the hand of the nations. And this Psalm also speaks of the corner stone, which becomes a central symbol of Jesus and his ministry:

The stone which the builders rejected has become the head of the corner (Psalm 118:22).

All of the excitement of Jesus’ triumphant entry into Jerusalem stirs up the city.  The news of him spreads to those who haven’t heard yet, and when they ask who he is, the crowd identifies him:

This is the prophet, Jesus, from Nazareth of Galilee.

APPLY:  

The Triumphant Entry into Jerusalem seems to be a very deliberately planned event.  Jesus leaves nothing to chance.  The donkey and her colt are requisitioned.  He rides through the gates into the city in conscious fulfillment of prophecy. And the people in the crowd who are “in the know” get it.  They are hoping for the Messiah, the Son of David, and they greet Jesus as their King who will deliver them.

Perhaps what they miss is the breadth of Jesus’ mission of salvation.  He has come not merely to relieve the oppression of the Jews by Rome.  He has come to release all  nations from the oppression of sin and death.

If only they had paid attention to the rest of  Zechariah’s oracle.  In Zechariah 9:9, the prophet sees the righteous King offering salvation:

lowly, and riding on a donkey,
even on a colt, the foal of a donkey.

But in the very next verse, the scope of salvation becomes global:

I will cut off the chariot from Ephraim,
and the horse from Jerusalem;
and the battle bow will be cut off;
and he will speak peace to the nations:
and his dominion will be from sea to sea,
and from the River to the ends of the earth (Zechariah 9:10).

To be sure, Zechariah’s prophecy has its share of blood and violence against Judah’s oppressors, but the most hopeful vision is peace and even salvation for all nations.

In order to interpret this symbolic, dramatic act of Jesus properly, we must follow him through the rest of the week  — to the cross and the empty tomb.  And then, as if fulfilling the prophesy of Zechariah, we must hear his Great Commission to the disciples at the end of Matthew’s Gospel:

“All authority has been given to me in heaven and on earth. Go, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,  teaching them to observe all things that I commanded you. Behold, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.” Amen (Matthew 28:18-20).

RESPOND: 

I remember well when I was  a kid looking forward to Palm Sunday, when the ushers would hand out palm branches and we got to wave them and shout out loud during church.  I thought that was really great fun.

And I also remember preachers telling us that Jesus wasn’t a “political” figure, but a “spiritual” one.  And I bought it because of course if Jesus was a King, he would probably have come into Jerusalem on a tank, or at least in a chariot drawn by white stallions.

But now I think I understand that Jesus is both a political and a spiritual Messiah.

Spiritually, of course, he delivers us from the power of sin and its lethal consequences through his own death; and through his resurrection he gives us new birth and abundant life.

Nevertheless, I have come to understand that Jesus is also a political Messiah in the best sense possible.  He came to announce that the Kingdom of God was near, and that it was being inaugurated.  It was beginning to grow even then, like the mustard seed that begins as a tiny thing and then grows into a great tree (Matthew 13:31-32).  And the final fulfillment of that Kingdom is drawing ever nearer, when God’s will on earth is truly realized, just as we have learned to pray every Sunday:

Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven (Matthew 6:10).

Aren’t the promises of God’s Kingdom the same promises that earthly kings and politicians would like to guarantee us?  Freedom from oppression, from hunger, from suffering?  These “freedoms” and much, much more!  Except that the promises of our King will be fulfilled forever.  As the angels proclaim from heaven in Revelation:

The kingdom of the world has become the Kingdom of our Lord, and of his Christ. He will reign forever and ever! (Revelation 11:15).

That is a King and a Kingdom I would vote for!

Lord, you are triumphant over sin, death, the devil, oppression, hunger and suffering.  But I do not lose sight of what your triumph cost you — your own suffering and death. I do look forward to the day when we shall no longer shout “Hosanna!” but we shall wave heavenly palm branches and shout “Salvation be to our God, who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb!” (from Revelation 7:10).  Amen. 

PHOTO:
Zirl Parrish Church-Jesus entering Jerusalem 1” by Flying Pharmacist is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.

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