Sermon
Matthew 21:1-11 April 5, 2020 Palm Sunday year A
Worship during covid19
Our King
is Coming!
Our King is coming! He’s riding on a
donkey and heading to Jerusalem. He’s certain where he’s going. He knows what’s
ahead of him. He has no doubt of who he is or how his story will end.
Our
King is coming! He’s riding on a donkey and heading to Jerusalem. We’re certain
where he’s going. We know what’s ahead of him. We have no doubt
how his story will end.
We are the people in the crowd.
We have decided he is the one who will save us.
We are
the woman in need of food on the table for her five children. We know that
Jesus is coming into Jerusalem to turn over the tables of injustice and make
sure there is always food for the poor.
We are
the people in the crowd. We have decided
that our government is corrupt and Jesus is coming to be the new King and will remove
the Romans, the dishonest, cruel politicians from the nation.
We are
the crowd. We have decided Jesus has come to
save us. We are the crippled, the blind, the homeless, the jobless, the
disenfranchised and Jesus is coming to create a world of equality.
Our
King is coming!
He’s
riding on a donkey and heading to Jerusalem.
We
are among the very crowds that sing Hosanna, blessed is he who comes in the
name of the Lord
and
betray him the very next day.
We know Jesus is coming for us in our
way and only our way. If he doesn’t do what we want, how we want it,
when we want it, and where we want it, we’ll quit. We’ll walk away. We’ll say
he was never for us anyway.
They needed, wanted a savior. They
needed the promised messiah to come.
The
followers of Jesus on the way to Jerusalem expected a Savior to end the madness
of Roman occupation. They were going crazy with rules always changing and never
knowing if they were doing the right thing. They could not trust that life
would ever have any normalcy because of the fickle changes of leadership from
one season to the next. Governors and Jewish leaders were thrown in prison or
relieved of duty frequently. The Jews had a tyrant for a king. The people were
fearful. They were anxious. The crowds saw no end in sight.
Today, we need a savior too. We need
a Savior, a rescuer like any other person in any other time of deepest darkest
difficulty.
We are facing a war of the worst
kind. It is an invisible beast, insidious, destroying nations, communities and
families. It has no sympathy for any race, economy, or person. What’s worse is
there is no end in sight. Ten more weeks the Virginia governor tells us. We’ve
barely endured the last three weeks. How will we get through this isolation? We
really want to be in a crowd. We want and need our ability to worship in
this sanctuary.
We want our chance to be
filled with joy
bursting from our seams
as we watch the little
children
carry banners and wave
palms.
We want and we need to
laugh with one another
as we rejoice and rub
shoulders with each other.
We
love Palm Sunday!
It
is the fun church holiday.
It
is the one Sunday where everything, absolutely everything is all about
happiness.
And
this year we have to make the happiness happen in our homes.
Three
years ago we couldn’t celebrate in this sanctuary because for six months it was
being cleaned from smoke damage. Then we asked, ‘How are we going to do
this?’ And here we are this year asking the same question. We think-We really need someone to rescue us
from this insanity.
The followers of Jesus had been through a lot.
The followers of Jesus continue to go through a lot.
Jesus
was the one they trusted.
The
ones who had followed him through the years.
They
witnessed his miracles.
They
experienced his touch.
They
were nourished.
Their
bursting hearts rang out in boisterous sounds of praise!
They
could not be contained.
It
seemed as if all those years of following him built up the anticipation and
expectation of who he needed to be for them in that moment.
Hosanna-save
us.
Blessed
is he who comes in the name of the Lord.
Be
our rescuer now!
It’s
time the climax of the movie is here and we need you more than ever.
Division
and fear is everywhere and the people are clinging to the newness of Jesus.
They are hanging on to his words of love and his listening ears and
compassionate ways.
We are going through a
great deal of anxiety now with no end in sight.
Our emotions are running
high.
Instead
of following distancing rules we are now acting in avoidance of one another.
We
used to say hi to everyone.
Now
we look at each other in suspicion.
We
can safe distance and still maintain social etiquette.
We
do not have to fear one another.
We
need each other.
We
don’t need to shame each other, or judge, or condescend, or ignore.
More
than ever we need to practice hospitality.
We
need to greet, to engage, to raise a hand and wave a palm, high and low, raise
our voices in confidence and support.
We can imagine why people were
flocking to Jesus. He gave them stability, comfort and hope in a world that had
none of that for them then.
Perhaps,
that’s why we are still seeking a savior.
We
still seem to be lost in hope when we face tragedy, turmoil, and disaster.
The moment we feel we have grip on the
world
and the way life is around us-we shout for
joy
and we sing hosanna-we got this.
And then in the next breath we are
blindsided by a circumstance that betrays
our very feelings and knocks us on our tushies.
We come this year and every year to
be reminded that we are always the people in the crowd crying out to Jesus
Hosanna-save us!
We may not be in a physical crowd
but we are in a virtual one. We are all flocking to the computer screens
looking for the worship service that gives us Jesus the savior to speak to our
needs. And if the preacher isn’t selling the Jesus we want, we’ll switch the
channel, we’ll walk away. We’ll quit.
That’s
what happens the day after the parade.
Holy
Week we call it now.
The
week we are entering as we enter with Jesus into Jerusalem.
We
make this journey every year because we need Jesus.
We
need to follow his ways and as the years roll by we begin to recognize
the power of Jesus within us.
We
sense his presence stronger.
We
feel our bodies bursting with joy as we go.
And
this year more than ever we’ll raise our palms and banners together.
We’ll
march together in the parade there in our living rooms excited about the
Savior. Excited about our love for him who taught love for each other.
We
believe!
We
will raise our voices, we will work together.
We
will show that distance does not change our ability to be in mission. Distance
is what strengthens our resolve to reach out further than ever. We raise our
palms and we shout through the roof that our Savior is with us. We will not
walk away. We are connected by the power of the Holy Spirit that makes us the
body of Christ. We can praise today and we can sing!
Our King is coming! He’s riding on a
donkey and heading to Jerusalem. He’s certain where he’s going. He knows what’s
ahead of him. He has no doubt of who he is or how his story will end. Hosanna
in the highest! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord!
Amen.
Resources: Feasting on the Word Year
A
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