Sunday, March 29, 2015

The Sunday of the Passion (Palm Sunday), Year B


Mark 11: 1–11; Psalm 118: 1–2, 19-29; Isaiah 50: 4–9a; Philippians 2: 5-11; Mark 14: 1 – 15: 47

A homily by Fr. Gene Tucker, given at St. John’s Church in Huntingdon, Pennsylvania on Sunday, March 29, 2015.

“WHAT IS DIFFERENT ABOUT THIS WEEK?”

            From the very earliest times, Christians have observed Holy Week with great devotion.  Pilgrims have walked the way of the Cross (the Via Dolorosa) in Jerusalem, or – if they were unable to do that in person and on location – they took part in a service of the Stations of the Cross.  Palm Sunday processions, like the one we did this morning, recreated the Lord’s entry into Jerusalem.  The institution of the Lord’s Supper, the Eucharist, on Maundy Thursday has been celebrated – often with the washing of feet – each year.  Christians have stood vigil on Easter Eve at the tomb, waiting the coming of dawn.

            Each Holy Week observance points forward to the end of this week and to the earth-shattering event that took place at the beginning of the new week.

            But, if we think about it, the things that happened during that first Holy Week consist of events that are radically out-of-the-ordinary (which is why we celebrate Holy Week in the first place), and events that were probably not all that uncommon in the first century.

            So, let’s take a  look at the things that took place as Jesus made His way into Jerusalem on this day, and as we do so, let’s distinguish those things that weren’t all that unusual from those that are radically so.

            The first thing we might look at is the great feast of Passover.  This is one of three major festivals (which takes place on March or April each year) to which observant Jews were expected to make pilgrimage to Jerusalem as often as they could manage to do so.  (In Luke 2: 41, we read that Jesus and His family went to Jerusalem each year for the Passover celebration.) As a result, Jerusalem was the focal point for a large number of people.

            Then as now, whenever large numbers of people gathered in one place, those in authority got concerned about security.

            There was good reason for their concern:

            In Jesus’ time, the Jewish people were divided into four main groups:  The priestly group called the Sadducees, the lay movement known as the Pharisees, a group known as the Essenes, and finally, the Zealots.

            The Sadducees were largely concerned with worship in the Temple, while the Pharisees were concerned about daily observance of every provision of the Law of Moses.  However, the Essenes were a group that believed that the temple and most everything connected with it was corrupt.  As a result, they withdrew from society.  One aspect of this withdrawal was their establishment of the Dead Sea community (from which the Dead Sea scrolls emerged.)

            But it was this last group, the Zealots, who probably caused the greatest amount of concern, for they advocated the violent overthrow of Roman rule.  Eventually, in the year 66 AD, it was they who would lead an armed revolt against the Romans, beginning the Jewish-Roman War.

            Rebellions in the outlying areas of Judea weren’t all that uncommon.  In the Book of Acts,[1] the famous rabbi Gamaliel relates the rebellions that were led by Theudas and then another one which was led by Judas the Galilean. 

            It’s possible that, as these movements made their way from the countryside into Jerusalem for the Passover, processions such as the one that Jesus made, riding on a colt, made their way into Jerusalem.  Perhaps the leaders of these movements were hailed as conquerors.  It’s important to note that the exclamation that greeted Jesus, “Blessed is the kingdom of our father David that is coming,” carries with it political overtones.  Naming David, the great king, amounted to a direct challenge to Roman rule. 

            Keeping the peace, and keeping a lid on things, was the main job of the Roman governors of Judea.  In fact, their job security depended on keeping things under control, by whatever means were necessary.

            The requirement to keep things under control caused the Jewish leadership, the Sanhedrin, to collaborate with the Romans.  We can see this clearly in the events which led to Jesus’ capture, His trial and execution.  It is important to say that the relationship between the Jewish leadership and the Roman authorities was, in essence, a marriage of convenience.  There was no love lost between the two.  But each one benefited from the alliance with the other.

            So the need to maintain order and control meant that, if necessary, crucifixions could be used to assert Roman control over the population.  Such events weren’t all that uncommon, taking place with some regularity, and perhaps even during Passover week.  (My own theory is that the two thieves who were crucified with Jesus were simply inmates in the jail, who were sent to Golgotha in an attempt to clean out the population of the jail.  It’s also possible that Pilate didn’t want to be seen to be singling Jesus out for punishment.)

            Remember that crucifixion was state-sponsored-terrorism, a mechanism to serve as a warning to anyone who would try to go against Roman authority.  As such, it’s possible that such events took place with regularity, and perhaps during the Passover week, when many people would be in Jerusalem for the celebration.  We don’t know this for certain, but it seems plausible.

            Another aspect of the Passover observance was the Seder meal, which took place on Thursday of Passover week.  We know that Jesus observed this custom, adapting parts of it to give us the gift of the Eucharist.

            These are some of the aspects of that first Holy Week that were, perhaps, not all that unusual.

            What then, is different about this week, and what is there that prompts us to observe this week with diligence?

            As Jesus’ disciples pondered the events of this week, they would come to realize:

·         The depths of God’s love for the world,

·         God’s power over evil, sin and death,

·         That the world’s history had been forever changed.

Thanks be to God!

AMEN.

           


[1]  See Acts 5: 33 – 37.