Palm
Sunday: An Invitation to Live
a sermon based on Matthew 21:1-11
by Rev. Cindy Weber
William Hazlitt wrote that no young man
believes that he will ever die, and the truth of the matter, I think,
is that in some measure that is true of all of us. Intellectually we
all know that we will die, but we do not really know it in the sense
that the knowledge becomes part of us. We do not really know it in the
sense of living as though it were true. On the contrary, we tend to
live as though our lives would go on forever. We spend our lives like
drunken sailors (Frederick Buechner, Listening to Your Life, p. 226,
adapted ).
In the book, Four Spirits, by Sara Jeter Naslun, Darl and
Stella are talking:
“Do you know the average altitude for the flight of robins?” he
asked.
A spurt of laughter flew from between Stella’s lips…”I don’t have
the foggiest idea,” she said.
“About thirty inches.”
“What a waste!” she said. “To have the gift of flight and to fly
so low.”
And that’s what we’re all scared of, isn’t it, having the gift of
flight and yet flying so low, coming to the end of our lives and
realizing that we lived like drunken sailors, coming to the end of our
lives and realizing that most of what we’ve done is to play it safe,
that we’ve only had a few moments when we’ve really shined, when we’ve
really managed to hold on to what matters most.
10,000 Maniacs sing a song about
these are the days to remember,
never before and never since, I promise, will the whole world be warm
as this, and as you see it you’ll know it’s true that you are blessed
and lucky, it’s true that you are touched by something that’ll grow
and bloom in you.
And all of us have those shiny days to remember, or at the very
least, those shiny moments when we’re flying high, embracing life for
all it’s worth. Our culture would have us believe that those moments
can be had through the accumulation of certain things, a certain kind
of car, perhaps, or the right pair of blue jeans, or by joining the
Army and being all that you can be, or by drinking Maxwell House
coffee.
What we know in our hearts of hearts to be true, though is that the
shiniest of moments are not the Maxwell House moments at all, but
rather those moments when we’ve been able to lose ourselves somehow,
to abandon our desires for bigger and better, to give something of
ourselves away, to pour something of ourselves out, to take a risk, to
speak up in spite of our trembly voices, to take a stand even when our
knees are knocking.
As we read this morning’s scripture, we see Jesus heading into
Jerusalem, purposefully, publicly. His triumphal entry, as it is often
called, is not as triumphal as it is a sort of a street theater. On
the same day that Jesus would have entered the city on his donkey of
peace from the east, the Roman governor would have led a procession in
from the west, accompanied by all the trappings of imperial power.
Marcus Borg says, If the language is not too modern, his entry was
a planned political demonstration, an appeal to Jerusalem to follow
the path of peace, even as it proclaimed that his movement was the
peace party in a generation headed for war. It also implied that the
alternative of peace was still open (Jesus A New Vision, p.
174).
And the cleansing of the Temple, as we call it, was more like the
shutting down of the Temple. I’ve heard that it could be likened to
Daniel Berrigan breaking into the Pentagon and pouring blood on the
draft files back in 60s. Jesus was taking on the domination system
head on, not just one system, but several, political, social,
religious, economic. And in the very seat of power, under the nose of
the Roman guard. While they might have been able to ignore his actions
while he was out there in the Galilean countryside, they couldn’t
ignore him now. Jerusalem was a tinderbox this time of year, full of
pilgrims who had come to celebrate the Passover, full of Roman
soldiers brought in to keep the peace.
Jesus, of course, knew all this. Knew that his actions would not,
could not be ignored. And that’s why, when I read these scriptures, I
have this picture of him in my head, he’s leaning forward, always
leaning forward, moving, moving, moving toward an inevitable
confrontation.
There’s been a lot of talk over the last year about Mel Gibson’s
movie, The Passion, and specifically about why Jesus died.
There are, of course, a lot of different ideas about that, but what I
see most clearly is this: Jesus died because he exposed the powers.
Jesus died because he confronted the injustices. Jesus died because he
would not allow himself to be controlled by the expectations of his
family, by the opinions of the public, by the norms of his culture.
Jesus died because he would not allow himself to be controlled by the
most intimidating, brutal symbol that the most powerful nation in the
world could produce, the cross, designed by Rome to keep a nation in
its place by publicly executing hundreds of people at one time,
because he would not allow himself to be controlled by the fear of
death. Indeed, he undercut the power of the cross to intimidate by
inviting his disciples to embrace it. Take up your cross and follow
me, he said. Don’t be afraid. Or maybe do be afraid, but don’t let
your fear diminish you, don’t let your fear define you, don’t let your
fear keep you from wholeheartedly, unobligedly pursuing the ways of
life.
In the book, Four Spirits, again, Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth,
who some of you heard at a Baptist Peace Fellowship conference years
ago, is lying in a Birmingham hospital bed after being injured by one
of Bull Conners’ fire hoses during a series of civil rights
demonstrations which have resulted in the incarceration of hundreds of
black children. A little seven year old boy named Edmund comes to see
Shuttlesworth, and the minister prays for him.
They opened their eyes, and Edmund says, “I didn’t let them put
me in jail. I just ran off.”
“Did you?” Minister wrinkled his forehead. He stared hard but
loving. “Then I got to tell you. Don’t be afraid of the jail. They
can’t jail a soul. Your spirit—it remain free, body behind bars.”
“Yessir.”
“Next time, you go on to jail like a good boy.”
Jesus died because he knew that not only can they not jail a soul,
they can’t kill one either, that there’s something way more important
than just living.
“Those who try to make their life secure will lose it,” he said,
“but those who lose their life will keep it.”
Henri Nouwen, talking about this scripture, says,
The great
paradox of life is that those who lose their lives will gain life.
This paradox becomes visible in very ordinary situations. If we
cling to our friends, we may lose them, but if we are non-possessive
in our relationships, we will make many friends. If fame is what we
seek and desire, it often vanishes as soon as we acquire it, but if
we have no need to be known, we might be remembered long after our
deaths. When we want to be in the centre, we easily end up on the
margins, but when we are free enough to be wherever we must be, we
often find ourselves in the centre. Giving away our lives for other
is the greatest of all human acts. This will gain us our lives.
“Those who try to make their life secure will lose it, but those
who lose their life will keep it.”
Walter Wink says that the phrase, make their life secure, is
literally make around, referring to the setting out of a
boundary or property line. Those who make around, those who live
within a certain set of boundaries will never be able to truly live.
But those who are willing to let loose, those who are willing to risk
taking on some new ground, those who are able to figure out what’s
worth dying for, and then pursue it with all their hearts, pour their
lives into it, pour their lives out for it, those are the ones who,
when all is said and done, will have really lived, will have really
flown high.
Blessed is the One who comes of the name of the Lord! Blessed is
the One who through death, invites us to live. Hosanna in the
Highest!