There is a new book on the market that effectively argues that God's mercy trumps our incessant need for justice. That in the final analysis, everyone is admitted to the mercy and the glory of God. This book has triggered a lot of criticism from Christians who are dismayed at the dismissal of human justice from the agenda of God. I certainly understand this criticism, although I don't agree with it. I am pleased that someone has again put forth the argument that I think originated with Jesus that God's love extends to everyone that has been created.
On Palm Sunday, Jesus entered Jerusalem on the back of a donkey that was obtained by his disciples for him. Before him, as he rode, onlookers scattered palm fronds and garments in his path. This was a sign of their agreement with his preaching and their hope that he would prove to be the Messiah that was longed for by the people who had been for years under Roman rule. They felt and were oppressed by the tyranny of Rome and yearned for leadership that would restore the Jewish state to its glory.
Jesus did not prove to be the kind of messiah that these people were looking for. They wanted one who would provide immediate relief for them. Those palms were symbolic of their hope. Hope that was fairly quickly dashed during the subsequent week. Palm Sunday is the beginning of Holy Week, when Jesus slowly falls into the hands of the leaders of the Jewish religion, and finally into the hands of Pilate and his soldiers. The week ends on Good Friday with the horrible crucifixion of Jesus on Calvary.
Holy Saturday is an especially poignant day for me. In my parish, I remember coming into the church and immediately smelling the aroma of the flowers that were being arranged in the church for the celebration of Easter the next day. It always struck me as terribly inappropriate to anticipate Easter in this way. Holy Saturday is the day that God is dead; crucified by all of us on the preceding day. Anticipating Easter is ridiculous in that light. We have no way at all of creating a resurrection. If we could do that, our funerals would disappear and we would all live in our bodies forever. I never said anything to the altar guild about this. I knew that they needed the time of preparation if we were going to have an adequate celebration of Easter the next day. What we were always forgetting in our need to prepare was that it is God who creates Easter, not us. We are the authors of Good Friday. All of us are complicit in the crucifixion of Jesus. We all stand before our God in this terrible sin.
In my parish, I had a short homily that I did after announcements on Palm Sunday. I took a long palm frond and taught the people in the congregation how to fashion it into a cross. This was to drive home the point that the flow of the week to follow began with the hope of the palms laid at the feet of Jesus as he entered Jerusalem and ended with the cross on Calvary. All of us did it. God's judgement is ours for this irredeemable sin. Ah, but you might argue, we weren't there. It was other people who did this. If we would have been there, it would have been much different. Well, let's look at who was there. His disciples deserted him one by one. Peter, his chief, denied him three times, joining Judas in the depths of deceit. The rest of them just wandered away. Only the beloved disciple stayed at the foot of the cross with Jesus mother and watched the whole thing happen. Nobody tried to stop it. The justice of Rome prevailed, and Jesus died on the cross.
We are all guilty of the crucifixion of Jesus. If we had been there, the circumstances would not have changed one bit. Jesus came to us to die for us all. To be God among us who died on the cross. After the crucifixion, God is dead. That is the long and the short of it. We have no claim to empty ourselves of the crucifixion. We did it.
But the wonderful news of Easter is that God rose from the dead. The tomb became empty, not by our doing, but by the grace of God. Jesus appeared to Mary Magdalene and the disciples after the resurrection, and by that incredible miracle, we are all absolved not only of our complicity in the death of our savior, but of all of our breaches of the laws of God. Jesus came to fulfill the law of God for each of us. The leaders of the Jewish faith thought that they were the perfect exemplars of the law. They marched up and down in their fine robes and were proud of their behavior. Over and over again, Jesus reminded they of their true obligation to provide for the poor and the outcast, not their fussy obsession with keeping their fundamentalist version of the law. Jesus always reminded them of the basic purpose of the law: to bring us together and to make us humble in the presence of God. To deal with all of those around us in the loving spirit that God imparts to each of us.
In the light of Jesus' crucifixion and resurrection all that we can do is stand in awe of what God has done to take our foolish acts and make of them wonder. That for me is what Palm Sunday is all about. I love the Grace and Mercy of God that transcends and wipes away our sin. In the light of this, all of us are included. We stand together at the throne of God, all redeemed as our Lord intended. Each of our lives illumined by the risen presence of God. Jesus, our Lord stands with us all before God pleading our cause.
Thanks so much for writing a Palm Sunday sermon, Dad. As someone who rarely lets her high horse rest in the barn, I know how comforting it can be to point fingers and hold others accountable. You remind me that we're forgiven--even for things that we think are unforgivable.
ReplyDeleteWho is the author and what is the name of the book you mention above? Love you, Jennie
Today, Palm Sunday at the lake, there was a man that came knocking on our door with Bible in hand. He only had a few teeth and we were a bit disturbed by his appearance. After he left, Beth and talked about what you so beautifully present in this sermon. That this guy came to visit us because he wamted us to be saved by following his path but I am reminded that we are all flawed and that there are many paths to know God and be present with this understanding. So, the man who visted us today, along with you and me and all the rest have the opportunity to know this grace and presence that is all around us. Thanks for always bringing that so wonderfully home again. It is good news.
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