Like his many parables, there are some curious and
surprising elements in this story.
They have been traveling toward Jerusalem. Now they
are, finally, almost there. But they pause, unexpectedly, near Bethany and Bethphage,
because there are a few final details to take care
of. Jesus turns to two of his disciples: “Go ahead into the village. You will
find a colt tied up. Untie it and bring it here.”
And here we might wonder a few things, including: Is this really
okay? That they should just go in and take a colt that belongs to someone else?
Might someone object to this?
Yes, actually, Jesus anticipates this, for he also tells them, “If
anyone asks you what you are doing just tell them this: ‘the Lord needs it.’”
So they went in and they found the colt. They untied it and, sure
enough, someone asked them what they were doing. They followed his instructions
to the letter, saying, “The Lord needs it,” and apparently that was good
enough.
The whole scene has an air of mystery to it, where somehow Jesus
knew just where to find a young donkey. It is an intrigue where there are code
words that need to be spoken: The Lord needs it. Well, if the Lord needs it, so
it shall be. They come back with the donkey and the procession into Jerusalem
begins – Something that is particularly dangerous for Jesus. Remember that
there was now a warrant out for his arrest. People were looking for him.
It was the time of the Passover – a time when Jews from all over
the diaspora were making their pilgrimage to Jerusalem. The city would be packed
and tensions would be high.
The Roman authorities would be there, too. As much as the Jews
loved Passover, the Romans hated it. Too many people milling about, too high a risk
for a disturbance of the peace.
The Romans prized peace above all things. But for Rome, peace meant something different
than what it means to me and you. For
Rome, peace was their unquestioned, unchallenged authority. For Rome, peace meant that there was no
dissent, that there was total obedience and loyalty to the empire. Rome prized their peace and was more than
willing to use violence to keep this peace.
The irony of this should be self-evident.
The Romans dreaded the Passover.
Because of the large crowds, of course, but also because of its
meaning. The Passover was, and is,
Israel’s remembrance and celebration of their liberation story. Many centuries ago, Israel remembers, God
freed them from the bond of slavery in Egypt.
Many centuries ago, God chose Moses to lead them out of Egypt, through
the wilderness, and to the promised land.
They remembered that God had given them freedom. But how could they celebrate this freedom,
while suffering under the oppressive boot of the Roman Empire, and not be
inspired to resistance? Rome dreaded the
Passover for very good reason; they knew there was a heightened risk of
uprising.
Everyone knew that this was a dangerous time in Jerusalem. Jesus knew
that this was a dangerous time in Jerusalem. Yet he and his entourage entered
the city gates, boldly, singing their praises to God and songs for peace.
Not the peace of Rome they were singing about. These are the
voices of resistance rising up.
The Pharisees lose their cool; the tension is rising too high.
Jesus shouldn’t be making an entrance like this. There are already reasons enough
for the Roman authorities to be tightening the screws on the Jews, they don’t
need another reason. The Pharisees order Jesus to quiet his disciples. But he
says to them, it would make no difference.
It would make not one bit of difference, because the stones would
shout out, all of God’s creation would shout praises to God, shout prayers for
peace. This is what the Lord needs: the crowds, the shouts, the palms, the
parade, the song of all creation rising up –
This, too, is what the Lord needs. And so it shall be.
This, today, is a moment for what the Lord needs. And as we see in
this scene, what the Lord needs is a challenge to the oppressive powers of the
world.
The Lord needs a colt – the antithesis of Herod’s war stallion. The
Lord needs this procession of the common people with their poor cloaks and
palms, a striking contrast to Herod’s soldiers in armor. The Lord needs all of
creation to stand up and shout: God’s reign shall come.
Getting there means earth-shifting, norm-shattering change. It means
standing against the powers of the world like Rome and any other authoritarian
powers that would oppress people and ravage God’s good creation. It means
standing for peace – not the peace of Rome, but the peace of Christ.
The Hebrew word for peace is shalom, but we should know that it’s
meaning is deep and powerful. Shalom could never be mistaken for the peace of
Rome, because the state of shalom is to be well, to be whole, to be at peace.
Shalom starts in the heart and grows outward and then into every other heart
and all of creation. Shalom does not require that some parts of creation be
crushed so others can prosper; shalom is all of creation at peace.
It is what the Lord needs. It is what we all need and the way to
it is through Christ.
We need Christ, this God in the flesh who came as one of us to
show us God’s dream for this world. The love and the care that he constantly
demonstrated, without boundaries; that he taught his disciples and they
continued to teach others. To care, to love, to give. To stand up for one
another, with one another, in a time of need. These small things.
No one of us is responsible for the peace of the world, but each
of us is responsible for doing what we can, to bring peace a bit closer. To do
what we would want others to do for us.
This is Palm Sunday. We know that later in the week these
disciples of his will fail. They will run and hide, they will deny having any
relationship with him. Tragically, they will not do what the Lord needs. Not the
things any one of them would have wanted or needed were they in his place.
On this day as they approached Jerusalem, the Lord needed the
colt, and he needed his disciples to go and get it for him. He needed the
people lining the road with their cloaks and shouting their hosannas – making a
loud noise for him. He needed this loud and insistent act of bearing witness to
the world.
And if that failed, he needed the rocks and stones to take up the
shouting on his behalf. The Lord needed all of creation to be proclaiming his
name. Hosanna! Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord! Peace in
heaven, and glory in the highest heaven!
The Lord needed everything that has breath – and even those things
that do not – to praise God. That is what he was here for. Jesus needed God and
all of creation to have his back in this. So he could do for us what we need.
What we all need is just what Jesus needed that day. To be
surrounded, to be held up, by community – community knit together by faith, by
love. This is what we all need.
The Lord needed that colt for his final entrance into Jerusalem. The Lord needed the people and the stones and all of creation to shout for him. The Lord needed it because the world needs it. To know that Jesus is Lord, Savior of all, and that through him, by grace, we are all bound together as one. What a glorious truth it is.
Photo by Mika Korhonen on Unsplash. "I tell you, if these were silent the stones would shout out."
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