But if I did, this year, this might be what I would have said.
PALM SUNDAY 2013
We make it to be
much more of a spectacle than it most likely was.
For us, nearly 2000
years later, Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem is a time of triumph and
celebration. Yet, at the time, it was a parade most likely hardly
noticed.
It certainly wasn’t
like the kind of parades we know—nothing like the Macy’s
Thanksgiving Day Parade, or local 4th of July parades, or
the parades last month for St. Patrick, never mind the Rose Bowl Parade. It was most likely a tiny band
of marchers—made up of those disciples who had been following him
for months or years and the people who lived outside the city walls
who had heard of this strange, charismatic teacher from Galilee.
Most of the people
weren’t expecting him and most of the populace of Jerusalem never
saw the procession of palms and cloaks and the country rabbi on a
colt or a donkey—we’re not even sure which. No dignitaries came
to greet him—none of the Pharisees or Sadducee's or occupying
Romans. In fact, the whole thing was probably over so quickly that
even if people inside the city walls heard of the rag-tag parade,
they wouldn’t have had time to rush to the Gate of the City he
entered to see him.
We don’t even
know which of the Gates of the walled city he entered. The Jerusalem
that Jesus knew is buried under a half-dozen destructions and
rebuildings now. Jerusalem’s gates in the 1st century
are not the ones in today’s city walls.
Most likely, since
he was coming from Bethany, he came up from the Kiddron Valley to
whatever gate was on the south side of the city. But we don’t know.
All we know about
the event is what we have in the gospel stories—and even they are
not consistent.
So, why is Palm
Sunday such an important day in our lives as Christians?
Maybe it is
important, not because what happened as Jesus approached the city of
Jerusalem—which direction he came from, which gate he entered, how
many people greeted him as the Messiah with Palms and Alleluias.
Maybe Palm Sunday is important because of what happened after he got
there.
The rest of the
week is not so full of bravado and
joy and excitement as the story of the procession. Things go sour
right away—and five short days from now, seemingly all of Jerusalem
is calling for Jesus’ death. Even his closest friends deny him and
go into hiding.
It is not what
happens “outside” the gate of the Holy City that we need to begin
to consider, but what happens “inside” the city walls.
The Palm Sunday
account actually leaves us still outside Jerusalem.
Perhaps the
question we need to ask is not “will we welcome Jesus to the City?"
Perhaps the question we need to ask is this: ‘WILL WE GO WITH HIM
INTO JERUSALEM AND STAY WITH HIM OVER THE NEXT WEEK?’
For me, I guarantee
you, the answer to that is not the answer I wish, in my weakness and
fear and brokenness, that I could give. My answer falls far short of
the one I long to give….
“YES, LORD,” I
long to proclaim, “I’M WITH YOU TO THE END!”
And I know better.
I too will betray and abandon and hide in fear. My answer falls far
short.
But at least I’m
asking the right question….
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