Presented to Corps 614 Regent Park Toronto, Palm Sunday, 20 March
2016 by Captain Michael Ramsay
To view a 2018 version presented to 614 Warehouse Mission in Cabbagetown, Toronto, click here: http://sheepspeaks.blogspot.ca/2018/03/john-1212-19-sunday-palm-reading.html
To view a 2018 version presented to 614 Warehouse Mission in Cabbagetown, Toronto, click here: http://sheepspeaks.blogspot.ca/2018/03/john-1212-19-sunday-palm-reading.html
Today I have a March Break quiz
for us (answers in footnotes):[1]
1) March
comes in like a lion and out like a ______?
2) What day
is represented in: Julius Caesar Act I, Scene II, ln 23
3) From
what country did St. Patrick come?
4) What
is the official colour of St. Patrick’s order?
5) The
March of the Penguins was about what birds?
6) What
is this?
Today
is Palm Sunday. Palm Sunday is a significant day in the Christian Church. Any
of us who have grown up in the church or who have been going to church for a
few years have inevitably been to a few Palm Sunday services. Do we know what
the big deal is about Palm Sunday?
John in
his gospel does a great job of telling us the meaning of Palm Sunday in his record
of the triumphal entry. He uses a lot of symbolism – not unlike Shakespeare in
‘Julius Caesar’. Today we are going to pull out five pieces of that imagery and
then put it back together for a full picture of what Palm Sunday looks like in
our life today. First, let’s re-read John 12:12-19:
12 The next
day the great crowd that had come for the festival heard that Jesus was on his
way to Jerusalem. 13 They took palm branches and went out to meet him, shouting,
“Hosanna!”
“Blessed is he who comes in the name of
the Lord!”
“Blessed is the king of Israel!”
14 Jesus found a young donkey and sat on it, as it is written:
15 “Do not
be afraid, Daughter Zion; see, your king is coming,
seated on a donkey’s colt.”
16 At first his disciples did not understand all this. Only after Jesus was glorified did they realize that these things had
been written about him and that these things had been done to him.
17 Now the
crowd that was with him when he called Lazarus from the tomb and
raised him from the dead continued to spread the word.18 Many people, because they had heard that he
had performed this sign, went out to meet him. 19 So the
Pharisees said to one another, “See, this is getting us nowhere. Look how the
whole world has gone after him!”
1.
THE TRIUMPHAL ENTRY
Image
number one: Palm Sunday is about the Triumphal entry. What is a triumph? It is victory.
These days we have victory parades when teams win championships. In Regina , they officially
called part of one of their busiest streets ‘the Green Mile’ for Roughrider
fans spontaneously paraded down there when they won the championship. Many
teams have official parades when they win championships. What about Toronto ? When the Argonauts
or the Blue Jays won the championship, did they have a parade, a triumphal
return to the city after winning the championship? This is what is happening
here. Jesus is riding into the city and it is celebrated as a triumph. But it
is before the game. It is in advance of the Great Cup or Game 7, it is in
anticipation of the coming victory.
2. JERUSALEM
This
brings us to the second of our five images for today: What city is Jesus riding
into? Jesus is entering Jerusalem .
What is the significance of Jerusalem ?
Jerusalem is the historic capital of Judah and Israel ? Now Jerusalem is part of the occupied territories.
The Romans, the Superpower of the time, have troops in the city and they
control the government. To some extent they even appoint the religious leaders
in Jerusalem
(cf. John 18). And like all superpowers they don’t tend to like rebellion and
they know that if there is to be a rebellion by the Jewish people it would
happen here in Jerusalem – their ancient capital city – and it would probably
be now during Passover, when the population of Jerusalem overflows with so many
people descending upon the city. Jerusalem
is the ancient capital city of a rebellion-prone people. [2]
3.
‘HOSANNA’, ‘KING OF THE JEWS’, ‘NAME OF THE LORD’
Our
third image to consider today is that of the crowds shouting. Verse 13, John
records, ‘They took palm branches and went out to meet him, shouting, “Hosanna!
Blessed is he who comes in the Name of the Lord! Blessed is the King of
Israel!”
This
is significant stuff. We sing ‘Hosanna’ in a lot of songs. We always mention ‘Hosanna’
at Palm Sunday. ‘Hosanna’ is what they are shouting as Jesus is riding into the
capital of occupied Judea right under the noses
of the Romans even as their collaborators, the Jewish religious leaders, have
already put a plan into motion to kill Jesus. Do we know what Hosanna means
(Verse 13; cf. Psalm 118:25-26)? Hosanna means ‘O Save!’, ‘Salvation!’, ‘Save
us!’ [3]
Jesus is triumphantly entering the historic
capital of Judah
– which is occupied by the Romans and people are saying, ‘Jesus! You are our
king! You –like all kings are supposed to – you come here in the Name of the
Lord! Jesus, you – not Caesar, not the Romans, not the chief priests, not the
rich, not the powerful elite – Jesus, you are our King; save us from Rome and save us from our
present leaders!’[4] Hosanna. Save us!
The establishment have their people in position:
governors in place of recent kings, rotating high priests, soldiers to keep
order but Jesus (who is from Galilee which is a particularly rebellious region
of a rebellious people) is triumphantly entering the town and the crowds are
running out to meet him, calling, ‘save us’, save us! Hosanna, o save us.’ The
crowds know he is the Messiah. [5]
They want him to save them from the occupation
and they are willing to serve him as king. This is no small thing. Think of
what superpowers do when crowds of people gather in opposition. Think of Guantanamo
Bay .
Think of Abu Gharib. Think of Afghanistan .
Think of Iraq .
Rome , her sympathizers and the establishment
don’t want rivals there and then any more than Washington and her establishment want rivals
here and now. These people, the great crowds, however are risking their lives
shouting ‘Salvation, King of the Jews, save us!’
4. PALM
BRANCHES
And
this brings us to the fourth of our five images for today, the palm branches:
John tells us also that the people lining the streets aren’t just yelling, ‘save
us king’. This is important. They are
waving palm branches. Today is Palm Sunday. Can anyone tell me the significance
of palm leaves at this time and place? The palm branches are important.[6] What do the Palm branches represent?
They
didn’t just pick up palm branches because palm branches happen to be near-by;
they pick up the palm branches because palm branches are a nationalistic symbol
(cf. 1 Maccabees 13:51, 2 Macabbees 10:7; cf. also Leviticus 23:40, Psalm
92:12, Matthew 21:8; Mark 11:8). It would be like if Canada
was going to seek independence from the US
or someone else and we were waving maple leaves or flags with the maple leaf on
it – everyone recognises that as a symbol of Canada . This moment probably would
have had an even greater effect on the authorities of Jesus’ day than a similar
one did on Canadian authorities in 1967 when France ’s
President Charles de Gualle cried out, ‘Vive le Quebec Libre!” while visiting Quebec . The palm branch
is a national symbol being raised in the traditional capital of an occupied
territory. This is where John drives home that Jesus isn’t just a metaphorical
or a spiritual king, Jesus is a political king.[7] He
is the King of Kings and the His Kingdom, the Kingdom of God, is at hand.[8] And John’s
placing of vv.14-15 after v.13 further conveys Jesus’ and John’s approval of
this claim.
5. DONKEY
This
brings us to our fifth and final image for today: the donkey. Verse 14: ‘Jesus
found a young donkey and sat on it, as it is written: 15 “Do not be afraid,
Daughter Zion ;
see, your king is coming, seated on a donkey’s colt.” John quotes Zechariah’s
well known prophesy about the king who will save and rule Israel as he
comes into his kingdom on a donkey (Zec 9:9). And here and now comes Jesus
riding into Jerusalem
on a donkey. There is more to this too because a donkey is not a war horse a
donkey is an ambassador’s mount. It is an animal of peace (cf. Genesis
49:10-11, Isaiah 40:9, 44:2)![9]
The Romans claimed that their wars brought the ‘Pax Romana’, the Roman Peace,
but John here is pointing out that Jesus – not Caesar – is the Prince of Peace.[10] Jesus
is King of the Jews and more than that Jesus is King of the World! [11]
These are exciting times. Jesus’ riding into Jerusalem at this time
and place in history is his crossing the Rubicon. There is no turning back. And
this is what Palm Sunday is: Palm Sunday is the point of no turning back. Jesus
is marching into the capital to great fanfare and we who are gathered here
today, we can celebrate this moment. We can cast ourselves alongside the men,
women and children watching the parade and cheering as our King rides into
town. This is a bigger deal than anything that has ever happened to this or any
community to that point in time. This moment in our text today is a moment when
the world recognizes the arrival of the one whom as Isaiah 9:6-7 declares, “The
government will be on his shoulders. And he will be called Wonderful Counsellor,
Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. Of the increase of his
government and peace there will be no end. He will reign on David's throne and
over his kingdom, establishing and upholding it with justice and righteousness
from that time on and forever! The zeal of the LORD Almighty will accomplish
this!” Praise the Lord. Today is Palm Sunday and Palm Sunday is a day of
celebration. Jesus is King! Do you believe that? Do you serve Him?
Today
if there are any of us here who don’t yet serve Him and haven’t laid our palm
branches in front of the king of heaven and earth – now is our chance to accept
His salvation from the pain of suffering through all the evils of this world
alone. Jesus is King and He will – Hosanna - save us. He will be with us in the
very midst of all our difficulties and challenges in our world today. And some
tomorrow soon we will all be raised with Him to be in paradise where there is
no more pain and no more suffering! Do you believe that? Do you serve Him?
Jesus rode into Jerusalem 2000 years ago but
even now it is not too late; so why don’t you join us now in celebrating his
arrival and in anticipating triumphant return – pledging our loyalty to the
King of Kings by laying our palm branches before the King.
You
were each given a symbolic palm branch today when you arrived and now as we
sing a song together I invite as to lay our palm branches at the altar today to
acknowledge our acceptance and allegiance to Jesus Christ as King and our
reception of His salvation both now and forever. Come now and lay your branches
before the King…
Let us
pray.
---
[1] 1) Lamb, 2) March 15, 3) Scotland , 4) Blue, 5) Penguins, a
palm sundae
[2] Walter L. Leifeld, The
Expositor's Bible Commentary, Pradis CD-ROM:Luke/Exposition of Luke/V.
Teaching and Travels Toward Jerusalem (9:51-19:44)/D.
Teachings on Times of Crisis and Judgment (12:1-13:35)/7. A call to repentance
(13:1-9), Book Version: 4.0.2
[3] Marvin R. Vincent, ‘Hosanna’ in Word
Studies in the New Testament Vol. II, (Peabody , Mass. : Hendrickson Publishers, Inc., 2009),
p. 216.
[4] But cf. Fred B. Craddock, Luke
(Interpretation: a Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching: John Knox
Press: Louisville, Ken., 1990), 227. Luke (ironically) alone among the gospels
does not record these inherent political overtones.
[5] Cf. N.T. Wright, 'God and Caesar, Then and Now'. Available on-line
at http://www.ntwrightpage.com/Wright_God_Caesar.pdf
[6] Cf. Colin G. Kruse, “John: An Introduction and Commentary”. Downers Grove ,
IL : InterVarsity Press, 2003 (Tyndale New Testament Commentaries 4),
CD ROM Disc: Tyndale Old and New Testament Commentaries (US) (3.0f) version
2009-10-09T22:50:34Z.
[7] Cf. NT Wight, How God Became
King: The Forgotten Story of the Gospels (HaperOne: New York, NY: 2012),
126-154.
[8] Cf. William Hendriksen, John
(New Testament Commentary: Baker Academic: Grand Rapids, Michigan: 2007),
187-188.
[9] Andreas J. Kostenberger, ESV
Study Bible note on 12:15 (Crossway Bibles: Wheaton , Illinois : 2007), page 2048.
[10] Cf. Colin G. Kruse, “John: An Introduction and Commentary.” Downers Grove ,
IL : InterVarsity Press, 2003 (Tyndale New Testament Commentaries 4),
CD ROM Disc: Tyndale Old and New Testament Commentaries (US) (3.0f) version
2009-10-09T22:50:34Z.
[11] Cf. Colin G. Kruse, “John: An Introduction and Commentary.” Downers
Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2003 (Tyndale
New Testament Commentaries 4), CD ROM Disc: Tyndale Old and New Testament
Commentaries (US) (3.0f) version 2009-10-09T22:50:34Z.