The Master Has Need of Us

Hello, Church fans! Palm Sunday begins with in triumph and ends in tragedy…or does it. Here’s hoping that this coming week is truly ‘holy.’ The video and text are below.

       When I was in Mrs. O’Brien’s 8th grade English class at Romig Jr. High, we learned that a common literary device to engage your reader is the “negative-positive approach.” That is, in order to convince your reader, it works best if you begin with a negative statement or idea and then morph or contrast it with a correlative positive idea. It’s the literary equivalent of affirming that it’s not how you start, but how you finish.

       Then we have Palm Sunday which violates this in the extreme. We start out by commemorating Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem. The palm is an ancient symbol of victory, used by kings returning from battle to signal to the townspeople that they were victorious. In a similar way, Jesus is welcomed to Jerusalem amid cries of, “Hosanna to the Son of David!”  Life is good.

       Then the liturgy shifts gears as we participate in the dramatic reading of the Lord’s Passion, this year from the Gospel of Luke. I don’t know about you, but I really hate it when we yell out, “Crucify him! Crucify him!” I think it’s because each of us realizes that because Jesus paid the price for our sins that day, we all had a role in his crucifixion. It is a hard reality, yet one that we must admit is true.  

       Yes, Palm Sunday is a downer of a way to enter into Holy Week. This is done on purpose. It is the way that the Church in her wisdom helps us to enter into the reality of our redemption. But, even as we do so, we must also admit that we have a decided advantage over those first disciples.  We know the rest of the story. For us, the commemoration of the Lord’s suffering and death is a bummer.  For them, it was an experience of total loss. The apostles saw the one in whom they placed all their hopes hanging in indignation on the Cross. Mary watched in agony as the life oozed out of her son. We are slightly bummed.  They were devastated. 

       But as I said, it’s all in how you finish. Like them, Holy Week begins with triumph, plunges into tragedy, but ends in victory beyond our wildest imagination. Like them, we enter into the devastation of the suffering and death he endured because of our sins, so that we may rise with him victorious in the resurrection. In a world of voices contrary to the gospel, we are not the heralds of doom. We are the prophets of hope for the world.

       The master has need of us.  Let us take the good news to the world.

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