Thursday, March 17, 2016

Sunday Gospel Reflection, March 20, 2016: Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord...

  What might our praise sound like as Jesus makes his final entry into Jerusalem?  

   On Palm Sunday of the Lord's Passion, we are called to recognize many of the facets of Jesus' identity:  he is at once suffering servant and king, obedient son and Lord, human and divine.  Jesus, as human, fulfills the description of the suffering servant offered by the prophet Isaiah; God has made it possible for him to stand in the face of controversy, steady, his face set like flint, so hard it gives off sparks, ready to suffer at the hands of those who believe they are doing God's will.  On the cross, Jesus will pray Psalm 22, which we should not be too quick to judge as pure lament.  In fact, although the psalm records the poet's distress -- My God, my God, why have you abandoned me? -- in fact, it moves from there to a place of praise for the help God has offered him.  It is as if Jesus is saying, human, I may be completely vulnerable, but so long as God is with me, I will praise my Father and give glory to him!

   The Gospel passage from Luke, read as we conclude the procession with our palms, echoes such praise as Jesus makes his way into Jerusalem on a colt:  Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord, the people cry.  They express obeissance, honoring Jesus by spreading their cloaks -- an essential and intimate possession -- on the road he passes over.  Even the stones will cry out, Jesus tells the indignant Pharisees, should they attempt to silence the crowds.  The inevitability of praise shines through our reading from Philippians as well, an early Christian hymn in which Jesus, humble and obedient, is exulted by God, who bestows upon Jesus the name that is above every name:  Jesus Christ is Lord, divine.

   Holy Week gives us the opportunity to contemplate all of these images of Jesus Christ: servant and king, son and Lord, human and divine.  As we move into the sacred space of Triduum, may we each and every one embrace these deep paradoxes of our faith, that we might advance in our knowledge of the salvation that only a Lord who was at once human and divine could operate on our behalf, and join in our confession that Jesus Christ is indeed Lord!

This post is based on Fr. Pat's Scripture class.
Image source:  Wordle

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