April 2, 2023
Matthew 26.14-27.66
+ Here we are this morning at the
beginning of Holy Week.
Every year, without fail, I begin this
week with a big mix of emotions.
Certainly, this week is the apex of the
entire Church Year.
Everything seems to lead either to this
week or away from it.
But, on a much more personal level, I
gotta say:
I actually kinda dread Holy Week.
Now, I know probably your first
reaction to my saying that is that you think I am dreading all the extra work,
extra liturgies and services of this coming week.
Actually, no.
I don’t dread that at all.
After all, I’m a church nerd.
I like doing church liturgies and,
frankly, doing the work I was hired to do.
I don’t dread Holy Week for any of
those reasons.
I dread this coming week for one big
reason:
I dread the emotional aspects of this
coming week.
I think the biggest toll of this coming
week on me is the emotional toll.
How can it not, after all?
We, as followers of Jesus, as people
who love Jesus and balance our lives on his life and teachings and guidance,
are emotionally tied to this man.
This Jesus is not just some mythical
character to us.
Yes, of course, he is the divine Son of
God.
For us, he is the Messiah.
He is the Chosen One.
But on a personal level, he is a
friend, a mentor, a very vital and essential part—no, he is our brother.
We relate to Jesus.
He shows us that what he endured in his
life is what we too endure in our own lives.
As the one we have chosen to follow, we
keep our eyes on him.
And, because we have chosen to follow
him, we also must follow him even through this coming week.
So, to have to go follow Jesus through
the emotional rollercoaster of this coming week is hard.
And today, we get the whole emotional rollercoaster
in our liturgy and in our two Gospel readings.
Here we find a microcosm of the roller
coaster ride of what is to come this week.
What begins this morning as joyful ends
with jeers and bleakness.
The Jesus who enters Jerusalem is the
Jesus who has done some incredible things in the past few weeks, at least in
the very long Gospel readings we’ve been hearing over the last few weeks.
Three weeks ago, he turned the
Samaritan woman’s life around.
Two weeks ago, he gave sight to a man
born blind.
Last week, he raised his friend Lazarus
from the dead.
This day even begin with us, his
followers, singing our praises to the One whom God has sent to us, waving palm
branches in victory.
He is, at the beginning of this week,
popular and accepted.
For this moment, everyone seems to love
him.
But this procession of his is different
than the normal procession of a monarch.
The great theologian Marcus Borg (who
lived as a teenager in that trailer park on Main Avenue in Moorhead back in the
1950s): wrote this:
[Pontius] Pilate’s procession embodied
the powers, the glory, and violence of an empire that ruled the world. Jesus’
procession embodied an alternative procession and alternative journey…an
anti-imperial and non-violent procession.”
Such a procession, as wonderful as it
seems, is, however, dangerous.
Such an anti-imperial, non-violent
procession is a threat.
And as a result…within moments, a
darkness falls.
It all turns and goes horribly wrong.
What begins with rays of sunshine, ends
in gathering dark storm clouds.
Those joyful, exuberant shouts turn
into cries of anger and accusation.
Those who welcomed Jesus into Jerusalem
have fled.
They have simply disappeared from
sight.
And in their place an angry crowd
shouts and demands the death of Jesus.
Even his followers, those who almost
arrogantly proclaimed themselves followers of Jesus, have disappeared.
Their arrogance has turned to
embarrassment and shame.
Even the Samaritan woman, whose life he
turned around, the man born blind, and his friend Lazarus have disappeared and
are nowhere in sight.
Even God seems distant and absent from
Jesus.
Jesus, whom we encounter at the
beginning of this liturgy this morning surrounded by crowds of cheering, joyful
people, is by the end of it, alone, abandoned, deserted—shunned.
Everyone he considered a
friend—everyone he would have trusted—has left him.
And in his aloneness, he knows how they
feel about him.
He knows that he is an embarrassment to
them.
He knows that, in their eyes, he is a
failure.
Some of us have known this feeling.
We feel for him because we too have
felt abandoned in our lives.
We too have felt that those closest to
us have turned their backs on us.
We too have felt that even God is
distant from us and we are truly, truly alone, vulnerable to the dark forces at
work in this world.
Throughout this coming Holy Week, the
emotional roller coaster ride will get more intense.
On Maundy Thursday the celebratory meal
of Passover will turn into a dark and lonely night of betrayal.
Jesus will descend to his lowest emotional
point after he washes the feet of his disciples and heads out into the garden
of Gethsemane.
In the garden, he will cry out to God
in his distress.
Friday will be a day of more betrayal,
of torture and of an agonizing violent death in the burning hot sun.
Saturday morning, he descends into the
grave, into that dark abyss of death.
And by doing so, he ultimately faces
death for all it is.
Saturday will be a day of keeping watch
at the grave that would, under normal circumstances, be quickly forgotten.
Through our liturgies, we are able to
walk with Jesus on this painful journey and to experience the emotional ups and
downs of all that will happen.
And next Sunday morning , the roller
coaster will again be at its most intense, its greatest moment.
Next Sunday at this time, we will be
rejoicing.
Next Sunday, we will be rejoicing in
the fact that all the humiliation experienced this week has turned to joy, all
desertion has turned to rewarding and wonderful friendship, all sadness to
gladness, and death—horrible, ugly death—will be turned to full, complete and
unending joy.
Marcus Borg finished that quote we
heard earlier in this way:
“Which journey are we on? Which
procession are we in?”
Are we on Pilate’s journey?
Are we the crowd, are we the religious
leaders who call for Jesus’ death because he doesn’t meet our personal needs?
Let us instead join Jesus’ procession,
as uncomfortable and frightening and horrible as it might be at times.
As we journey through the dark half of
our liturgy today, as we trek alongside Jesus during this Holy Week of
betrayal, torture and death, let us keep our eyes focused on the Light that is
about to dawn in the darkness of our lives.
Let us move forward toward that Light.
Even though there might be sadness on
our faces now, let the joy in our hearts prompt us forward along the path we
dread to take.
And, next week at this time, when we
gather here again, we will do so basking in God’s incredible Light—a Light that
triumphs over the darkness of not only Jesus’ death, but ours as well.
Let us pray.
Holy God, be with us. Be with us as we
journey the way of Jesus this week. Be present with us as we follow Jesus to his
final meal, to his agony in the garden, to his arrest, to his torture and to
his death. But let us follow him beyond the cross too, to that place where you
will raise us up and give us unending life and joy. In Jesus name, we pray. Amen.
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