
Sunday of the Passion
Palm Sunday
Isaiah 50:4-9a
Psalm 31:9-16
Philippians 2:5-11
Luke 23:1-21
(The context of this sermon was 100% written in Canada by a human)
So now we near the end: it has come upon us almost without warning. For the last five weeks, we have heard hardly a word of dissent: Jesus has been conducting his ministry on the road to Jerusalem, and while he has been pushing all sorts of boundaries, any sign of brewing trouble has been merely whispers on the fringes.
But now on Palm Sunday, we hear the celebration and cheering on the streets as Jesus and the disciples enter the gates of Jerusalem. We can see the palms thrown on the ground before this healer and teacher on a donkey. And we know, with the benefit of hindsight, that within that jubilant crowd, a meanness of spirit is taking root and growing like a vine, turning hearts one by one. The misinformation is spreading, in whispers. Who does this man thinks he is? someone asks his neighbour. “Are we sure he’s the great man everyone says?” the neighbour wonders to her husband. “They say he’s a charlatan trying to trick us,” the husband tells her brother. And so on, and so on, until the cheers become jeers, and the welcome becomes poisonous.
Jesus, who has tried only to spread good, who has been a voice of God on earth, is thus betrayed by an angry mob, sacrificed by an indifferent leader, a self-serving religious leadership, and crucified. His last words will not be to his followers, preaching in a public square, but to the thieves hanging with him. How did we end up here?
Certainly, one reason why his death breaks us, is that it is hard to have faith in humanity when we reject the very kind of leader that we say we most desire. Long before the word had all its negative connotations, Jesus was the consummate politician. He was a master orator, able to sway a crowd with his words, to inspire faith and belief. He asked people to dream, and he gave them a reason to do so. He held himself to the same high standard that he set for his followers. And he spoke for what was right, because it was right, and not for his own political gain. And yet in the end, humanity rejected him.
We say we want leaders who tell us the truth, who warn us that change will be hard, who admit the fight may be long. We claim to admire leaders who tell us how the world really is instead of spinning a story to make us feel better. Maybe we don’t really seek a leader who says, “I will sacrifice on your behalf, but in return I call on you to practice justice and kindness, even when it is the hardest moment of all to do so.” How often has humanity been comforted by a leader who feeds us simple answers or manufactures a good enemy, even with one hand in our wallets, while crushing the values we claim to hold dear?
Jesus could have been an entirely different kind of leader. Not the kind we see in the world these days -- the kind that takes advantage and looks after themselves first. He had the holy pedigree. He had the star power. He had the talent. Perhaps we are even frustrated that he didn’t capitalize better on that strength, or fight back.
And yet to do anything differently would have been to betray the very lessons he was teaching: he knew the only way his story could end. Jesus was a person of substance. A policy guy. He looked at the root causes of problems, rather than at the quick fixes. That’s the harder sell – and certainly to the powers that be, more threatening.
Think on it: Jesus promised people freedom and hope, but nothing for himself, and he was hung on a cross.
Here we are, as Canadians, at a time when we must also consider the questions of leadership, in the most important election in a generation. Yet we have clarity, thanks to Jesus. We have the values of the gospel and the example of his leadership to ask ourselves: which candidate is speaking for the good in the world that matters most to me?
And once we make that choice, where do we fit? We are told what to do – and how to shape our response in the first lesson. I want to draw your attention to three parts in particular from which we can take some solace out of our difficult gospel.
First, we are told: The Lord God has given me the tongue of a teacher that I may know how to sustain the weary with a word. So we are told – from the beginning – not to be silent.
Secondly, we are offered this passage: The lord has opened my ear; and therefore I was not rebellious, I did not turn backward. So we are told to listen. And we are told that in listening, we will learn not to rebel against the gospel and God, but how to go forward whatever the cost. These, we know, are political skills – the ability to speak when the time calls for it, and to listen when we need to. We are to look for the way, following the model of Jesus, to bring the gospel to people who need to hear it the most. And to find those opportunities, we have to listen.
Lastly, we are reminded of our secret weapon: The Lord helps me; therefore I have not been disgraced; I have set my face like flint. Whenever we get turned backwards, we have the gospel to remind us of the right direction, and to brace our backs against difficulty.
Ultimately, the story of Jesus’s last day is about too many people failing to speak when they should have, or to listen. Too many people swept up in a mob that was played like a fiddle by the Pharisees, so desperate to bring Jesus down. Too many people who listened to whispers. Too many people who didn’t sit down and reflect on the full picture: what evidence do I have that Jesus says who he is and means what he says? What evidence that the sources of the misinformation might have an agenda? Have I taken my values and looked at the situation with those virtues in mind?
It is a powerful lesson in history, as we have seen time and again, when mobs have been moved like a swarm of bees into doing harm. And yet we also know it takes only a couple of people to turn the mob back. They just have to be brave enough to risk it. On this day, despite the sheer cruelty of the sentence, there was no one brave enough. And as the jubilant parade goes silent, we have to live with that.
How many in that crowd on that grim day, realized, when they were alone with their thoughts, what their anger and betrayal had done. I imagine many of them said: “I didn’t know this would happen! I wasn’t thinking!” How many times do we claim the same, even though there can be no doubt of the path we were on? How many easy choices do we make only to claim that the results were not our fault?
We stop the story this morning with an angry mob out of control, and the desires played out, and we are horrified. And we are meant to hear the warning of that lesson so that we avoid it in our own lives, so that we recognize when it is happening in our own society.
In those moments, God gives us a few rules: Speak only with a teacher’s tongue, listen with an open ear, and let the gospel guide you.
Amen.